Archive for August, 2010

Lessons From an Introvert

Monday, August 9th, 2010

iStock_000008962604XSmallFourteen. That’s what the number on the back of my nametag said at the women’s retreat I was attending at my new church. I knew it represented either a group number or the opportunity to win a door prize.

Desperately I was hoping for the door prize. Send me home with a flower, a book or even a cute bracelet. But please, oh, please don’t make me talk to strangers.

I am an extreme introvert. Just going to the retreat and rooming with five women I was still getting to know was a big step for me. The thought of being put into a small group with even more new women was something I thought would surely kill me.

When they announced it was time to play a game I immediately began looking for the exits. Nobody else moved. If I got up and walked out it would have been obvious. Inwardly I groaned. The game was called Fast Friends and I would have to sit in not one but three small groups and chat with strangers that night. My first stop was group fourteen…

To read the rest of this post head on over to She Seeks.

Counting the Cost Isn’t Always Easy…Especially When Chocolate Is Involved

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

chocolate

Recently, I had the women from my small group over for a fondue party. What’s better than girlfriends and chocolate, right?

On this particular night I was going to provide the chocolate and they would provide the dippers. As RSVPs flooded in I began to drool over the items they were bringing and how good they would taste drenched in chocolate.

Pretzels. Strawberries. Pineapple. Pound Cake. Marshmallows. Bananas. This was going to be a gorge fest. I worked extra hard at the gym in the days leading up to this party so I could enjoy it without guilt.

Instead of sticking with my typical milk chocolate fondue I decided I was going to do something special for this party. So I turned to my trusty friend Google and began to search for what I thought would qualify as an unforgettable fondue recipe.

I settled on a chocolate toffee version that involved melting Toblerone bars in it, among other things. When I pulled the recipe out to make it a few days later I had to laugh to myself when I saw the calorie count.

At the top of the recipe it said, “136 calories per serving.” Then in really fine print it said, “Chocolate not included in calorie estimations.”

Considering the fondue was made up of mostly chocolate, that figure was pretty skewed. Good thing my girlfriends and I weren’t trying to count calories that night. As we were enjoying dessert I shared that story with them and they all laughed.

How like life, I thought to myself later that night. Sometimes it’s harder to count the cost than we think.

Certain things in life bring consequences that are hard to foresee. Overspending and relying on debt. Choosing to have sex with a guy we aren’t married to. Dating a non-Christian. Having one drink at a party.

No matter what stage of life we’re in there are always choices before us that present skewed data that can make it difficult to make an educated decision. Nobody ever said making the right choice would be easy. But sometimes it’s really not easy.

That’s why in a shaky world it’s important to rely on the Bible to be our source of truth.

1 Corinthians 10:13 says, “The temptations in your life are no different from what others experience. And God is faithful. He will not allow the temptation to be more than you can stand. When you are tempted, he will show you a way out so that you can endure.” (NLT)

What verse do you constantly turn to when you need to be presented with the facts before making a tough decision?  

Accidental Words from an Unlikely Person

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

girlwithtea

The end of this summer will mark five happy years of marriage for me. Unfortunately, for some of my friends this is not the case.

While I’ve been busy domesticating myself by doing things like burning my arms while trying to attempt cooking feasts fit for kings, decorating and cleaning a house, and kissing a super cute guy goodnight every night some of my friends have been asking difficult questions, looking to heaven with tear filled eyes and wondering when it’s going to be their turn.

While my heart breaks for them, I can only imagine their pain. I can’t relate to it. By the time I was twenty-three I was married. So, I often keep my mouth shut when the topic of singleness comes up and one of my single friends needs to vent.

If there’s one thing I don’t ever want to be it’s the married friend who offers simple platitudes instead of genuine empathy when it comes to serious matters of the heart. Maybe this is because I was the token single girl in my group of friends during high school and I never want to make anyone else feel the way I felt then.

So, for the last five years, I have kept my feet from treading on the holy territory of my friends broken hearts. I’ve listened with patience and cried with them, but I have not opened my mouth to offer trite sayings or even advice. Aside from the rare occasions where I was actually asked for such input, I have succeeded in avoiding topics where I felt like my two cents didn’t belong.

Until (you knew that was coming didn’t you?) I found myself in Starbucks a few weeks ago talking with a new friend who is exactly my age, in a similar profession and desperately wishing she was married. I quietly sipped my chai latte and watched the summer rain fall outside as I listened intently not just to her words but to her heart.

Something in the soul of this friend needed to be encouraged and without even realizing it I found myself offering a small piece of advice from my experience. She looked at me wide eyed almost like I’d slapped her.

“I’m so sorry,” I quickly began to back pedal. “Married Girl should shut up. I know.” Inwardly I chided myself for my lack of sensitivity.

“No, no,” she went on. “That is exactly what I needed to hear. Thank you for sharing that with me. I don’t feel alone anymore.”

Now it was my turn to look at her wide eyed.

Had I been keeping my mouth shut when I had encouraging words to offer for the past five years? Was I missing out on an opportunity to minister to other people because I was afraid it wasn’t my place to speak up?

These thoughts honestly hadn’t crossed my mind. James 1:19 admonishes us to be quick to listen and slow to speak, and I think there is a tremendous amount of wisdom in not always having something to say. But there are also times when we are to share a little piece of our stories with someone even if our circumstances look completely different than theirs.

2 Corinthians 1:4 says God comforts us so we can comfort others. Is there a piece of your story that could offer comfort to someone else? Have you been holding it back out of fear of feeling unqualified?

Be on the lookout for people who may need the words God gave you to share. Even if their lives look completely different than yours step forward in faith and share them anyway. You never know the difference it will make.

Do you have a story about how you have encouraged (or been encouraged by) an unlikely person? If so, I’d love to hear about it.