Posts Tagged ‘Dating’

Exposing the Myth of Prince Charming Part 2

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

iStock_000006861693XSmallThe following is part 2 in a series written by Meredith Young. To read part 1 click here.

It took five years for it to dawn on me: Prince Charming was a myth. 

And I don’t say this with a cynical voice anymore; I say it as truth.  The stories we were told as children were just stories – to base our expectations off of fairytales has been fruitless and harmful to our development as the beautiful young women we were created to be. We have so strived to be that idea of a princess and have ended up with broken hearts. 

The only stories we are to believe are true, and it just so happens that the most romantic book written is the Bible.  Instead of thinking of it as God’s rulebook, think of it as God’s answer to fairytales. 

Instead of an elusive object to seek after, like a prince, we have a relationship to pursue, which God has already begun with us.  It was the sacrifice of His Son that gave us the greatest freedom we will ever experience.   We are freed of our endless pursuit of the princess ideal; in Him, we are free to be ourselves and find complete acceptance. 

Having a relationship with God doesn’t get rid of all those pressures of perfection, but it certainly makes it easier to have someone perfect adoring you!  When we toss aside those unrealistic expectations for the perfect prince, we also open ourselves up to more meaningful friendships with our guy friends – our brothers in Christ – and later on, perhaps romantic relationships. 

 When the expectations for ourselves change, we are then able to be more accepting of the opposite gender, rather than being frustrated at their lack of perfection.  I definitely support the idea of having a set list of things that you want in your future husband, or even the guys you may date, but realize that they must be real things; the perfect human being exists only in Christ, and each man will have flaws.   It’s realizing what things are non-negotiable, things like a strong faith, good morals, a handsome smile, or intelligence – whatever you value most, realizing that every man will have flaws.

When I was twelve years old, before I met Peter and made all of those grand mistakes of insecurity, I made a list of things I wanted to find in a guy.  Over the years, that list has been edited as I grew as a person, but the basic foundation is still there.  Let me share with you my list:

  • God-loving, God-fearing, God-serving heart.
  • A sense of humor
  • A handsome smile OR thoughtful eyes
  • Humble intelligence
  • Godly leadership skills and the will to use them
  • Ability to own up to and apologize for mistakes
  • Compassion
  • Self-control
  • Strong church home & a solid group of male friends
  • Ability to appreciate, if not understand
  • Strength – physically and emotionally.

Four years ago, I met a guy who I never would have given a second thought.  This June, I’ll be marrying that guy.  He’s not perfect—he deals with anger, frustration, and selfishness just like everyone—but he is perfect for me. 

Our gifts and personalities complement each other by bringing out the best – just what God designed.  When we find ourselves content in the Lord, He will grant us the deepest desires of our hearts.  It is only a matter of allowing His romance to drown out the legend of Prince Charming.

Exposing the Myth of Prince Charming Part 1

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

daydreamingThe following is a guest post by Meredith Young.

She is breathtaking. 

She is a princess, you say. A prince, equally handsome, rich, intelligent, kind, and generous, always sweeps into the picture.  The two go off into the sunset, leaving the others to sigh and wish for their chance at romantic bliss.

What’s wrong with this picture?  It’s beautiful.

But what happens if our lives don’t happen to match up with that “ideal”? Does that make us less of that ideal girl?  How do we define ourselves when we don’t fit into the fairytale mold?

That became the foundation of my insecurity.  Through middle school, a time already full of emotional and physical change, I struggled even more with not being the lovely Princess.  Perhaps, I thought, if I will never look like the fairytale princess, then maybe I can act like her; I would have excellent manners, a soft speaking voice, constant kindness, and love for nature.  This mission also failed me. 

I’m naturally a passionate person with strong opinions, and growing up, I had yet to learn how to balance my passion with wisdom.  I was snotty, stubborn, and awkward.  I loved nature but would never be seen singing with the woodsy animals that princesses seemed to love.

As I went through high school, I grew cynical. I was going to be a realistic girl now.  I was going to face the world as it actually was.  But I still harbored that desire.  I hated all of the guys at my high school because they were so far from Prince Charming, and yet I craved their attention; even from these less-than-perfect guys I felt valued.

That was where I fell.  This desire for attention and for my own prince came to a climax during my sophomore year of high school.  A certain boy (we’ll call him Peter) took interest in me; he wasn’t attractive, but he was nice, and I took his attention to mean exactly what he wanted.  The first six months flew by like a dream:  I would go to his house after school, and we would hold hands and watch movies.  We would go out for ice cream or fast food, and attend school plays together. 

But Peter decided he wanted something else.  He would repeatedly pressure me for sex, tricking me into thinking that if I didn’t give in, he wouldn’t love me, and I would no longer have any value as a person.  As he drove me home I would collapse in tears, sometimes while I was still in the car, and he would instantly command me to stop crying.  I knew life wasn’t supposed to be like this, but I didn’t know how to ask for help.  I was so ashamed that my parents would hate me once they found out; it took me a year to break up with Peter, and two years to tell my parents.

My prince had failed me, and I was failing me, too.  Every structure in my life was falling apart, and I lost sight of who God was in the midst of all of this.   The one thing I needed the most—a consistent, living relationship with God to feed and define me—was the one thing elusive and forgotten. 

To be continued on Thursday…

Are Promise Rings Premature (Part 2)?

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Teenage couple talkingIf you missed Tuesday’s post click here and read it first.

My personal stance is that a promise ring is a waste of time. It’s an unnecessary step on the way to the alter. Until a guy is ready to put an engagement ring on your finger, don’t let him put anything else on your finger.

A promise ring allows a guy who is not in a position to make a real commitment to you to make a lesser commitment and thus a mini-marriage is born. The two of you begin talking about what life will be like when you get married, and what you will name your children. In a way, you begin to play house with no real grasp on how much money it really takes to run a household, how to balance a budget and how quickly college loans can add up.

Most guys I know handed out promise rings claiming, “This is just until I can save up for a real ring.” One guy I knew in college even went door to door in the dorm buildings offering to take out people’s trash for a small donation toward his girlfriend’s engagement ring. If a guy needs to save up for an engagement ring, and doesn’t have a job that will provide him with an income with which he can purchase a ring quickly, you’re in trouble.

A guy who cannot afford an engagement ring will never be able to afford real life. A promise ring is like a glaring reminder that this guy is in no way ready to walk down the aisle. You can choose to be exclusively committed to someone in a dating or courting relationship without a promise ring. And while your ring finger is free from a premature promise it might be a little easier not to begin sentences with “When we get married…”

The promise ring changed everything for Cyndi and Mark. They were no longer dating. They were “pre-engaged.” And as the years wore on and more and more of our friends really got engaged, Cyndi’s finger still boasted the simple silver ring Mark had given her long ago. And the two of them were thrust into a pressure cooker.

Cyndi began to grown insecure when people constantly asked when they were getting married. Mark just grew annoyed. And one day the pressure cooker boiled over spilling the remnants of two broken hearts and one wasted relationship. There were tears and heartache.

Cyndi eventually packed up all of her Mark memories and stored them away in a box. Mark said good-bye and packed his bags and moved somewhere new. And for the first time in four long years both Cyndi and Mark were free to explore who God made them to be outside of the confines of a premature relationship.

When she was twenty-one Cyndi got to do what she had never allowed herself to do at seventeen: explore who God made her to be. Her gifts and talents began to come alive at this point. She joined a small group and made some of the greatest friends ever. For the first time she understood what “girl time” really was and she enjoyed the fact that she didn’t have to check in with a boyfriend if girl time went later than scheduled. My heart danced as I watched her get her master’s degree and land her dream job.

For the first time she got involved in ministry on her own as she began teaching a Sunday school class, and she also started digging deeper in her quiet times with God. Verses rolled freely from her lips, and she seemed far more sympathetic than she had ever been when she talked with people who were hurting.

 Her pain had birthed a new compassion in her. And God’s voice seemed to be clearer to her than it had been in the past. And Cyndi grew into one of the sweetest and most genuine Christians I have ever known. Mark, on the other hand, has played the prodigal son. His relationship with the Lord seems sketchy at best these days. He took his freedom to explore to places he really shouldn’t have, proving to all of us that he and Cyndi really never were meant to be.

 Two weeks from today there is a date circled on my calendar with little hearts drawn next to it. My husband and I are going to Cyndi’s wedding—and Mark is not the groom. Four years after her devastating break-up, and eight years after Mark first slid a thin silver band onto her ring finger, another man—the right one—got down on his knee and proposed. And when Cyndi said yes he slid a beautiful diamond—backed with a genuine and mature promise—onto that very same finger. They set a wedding date for eight months later.  

For a long time after the break-up, Cyndi left Mark’s ring on. She later admitted to me that she feared she might never meet someone else. But there came a time when she was ready to trust God and take it off. And it wasn’t until she was ready to remove the promise ring from the wrong guy that the right guy came along and put a forever ring on her finger.

Are promise rings premature? I think so. My only two friends who ever wore them married someone other than the guys who gave them those rings. Ironically, both of those guys who were “so spiritual” and gave their girlfriends promise rings eventually walked away from the Lord entirely. Because of Cyndi’s experience I never wore a promise ring. Instead, I waited for a guy with a real diamond and a real promise to back it up. And because of that, I don’t have any regrets.

(This article first appeared in BRIO magazine.)

Are Promise Rings Premature (Part 1)?

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

iStock_000001532579XSmallI will never forget my friend Cyndi’s eighteenth birthday party. Her boyfriend, Mark, showed up with a promise ring and a dozen roses. Cyndi was ecstatic and I was jealous.

For the next four years I listened to her talk about their future as if it was both sure and steadfast. Her sentences started with “When Mark and I get married…” and they ended with something resembling happily ever after.

Imagine my shock four years later, post-college, as I sat across from Cyndi in a quaint Thai restaurant as she dropped a bomb on me when I asked my usual, “So how’s Mark?”

“Actually,” she said sipping her water slowly. “We broke up.” Her sentence hung in the air for a good few minutes as I tried to comprehend what had just happened. If Cyndi and Mark were no longer CyndiandMark then my world had just been turned upside down.

“What happened?” My mouth finally formed the words my heart had been screaming for the past few minutes. And for the next several hours I sat silently chewing on mushy noodles and nodding every now and then as Cyndi proceeded to tell me how her dreams fell apart.

 As she spoke I noticed three fatal flaws in their relationship that, if avoided, could have saved them from wasting four years of their lives on the wrong person and from spending the next several years getting over the trauma of it all.

The first thing that stood out to me about Cyndi and Mark’s relationship is how it began. One day we were all just friends hanging out as a group—living, breathing, and eating as a group would be more like it—and the next day there was a couple in our midst. Cyndi and Mark had been secretly pairing off for a months before the rest of us knew about it. Truthfully, when I found out they were dating I was shocked.

And they weren’t just dating, they were seriously dating. In the beginning it was hard to get used to. Mark had instantly gone from being everybody’s brother to being Cyndi’s boyfriend.

Their relationship began in secret. Most things that begin in secret don’t end well. When something is done in secret it is done without the input and godly counsel of others who may be able to see something that those of us who are in a circumstance can’t see.

Now, I’m not sure if any of our friends would have really had any objection to Cyndi and Mark dating. But perhaps our youth pastor, or one of our youth leaders, would have been able to caution them against the intensity with which their relationship began.

Proverbs 11:14 tells us that “in the multitude of counselors there is safety.” That means wise decisions are made by consulting other people—godly people—whom we would allow to speak the truth into our lives. Cyndi and Mark began their relationship without a multitude of counselors. They prayed and sought God together and separately before beginning to date, but they did not seek the counsel of anyone else.

This left plenty of room for their emotions to rule out common sense. And instead of being able to learn from anyone else’s mistakes they had to (painfully) learn from their own.

This isn’t a matter of age or maturity. Emotions can run wild at any age if we don’t do our best to bridle them and keep them in check. I was twenty-two when I met my husband, Michael. We were crazy about each other. I had already graduated from college and started my career, but we still sought counsel from our pastor and parents before we began dating. And as soon as we were dating we were open about it with all who asked. There wasn’t any secrecy involved. I was up front with Michael about it from the start.

“We can’t keep this from people,” I told him. “Even if we think it’s not their business. I don’t want anyone saying we started our relationship in secret.” Michael agreed.   

Cyndi was seventeen and Mark was eighteen when they started dating. What we can all see in hindsight is that Mark never had any right to put a ring on Cyndi’s finger. He wasn’t in a position to back his promise up with actions. He had no intentions of getting married anytime soon. Had they sought a multitude of counselors in the beginning, perhaps someone would have seen that and spoken up…

(Come back Thursday for part 2 of this article.)

While You Wait for Your Future Husband

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Blog Post Wedding

Tomorrow my husband is in a wedding for one of his best buddies. Today we’re headed off to the rehearsal and a weekend full of celebrating with an awesome and godly couple. As I was shopping for a gift, getting my husband fitted for his tux and figuring out what I was going to wear, I thought about those of you who write to me all the time dreaming of your own weddings—and more importantly, your future husbands.

So, in honor of this wedding weekend I want to offer you some practical advice while you wait for your future husband. These words first appeared in my book The Divine Dance (which I wrote when I was still single):

God’s will is not always immediately discernable. You will probably meet and interact with several guys before you find “the one.” Mr. Right doesn’t usually come into your life accompanied by soft music and a cherub with a bow and arrow. So do yourself a favor as you wait for his arrival.

Make a list. Not a complicated list, but a specific one. Write down five or ten absolutely nonnegotiable characteristics that your future husband must have. Then write down five things that are absolutely nonnegotiable that your future husband cannot have. Prayerfully consider the items you write down, and then pray those things for your husband whenever you think of him. Each time some guy waltzes into your life, pull out your list and see how he measures up. 

Be honest with yourself, and you will save yourself a lot of heartache. Try to make your list one full of character traits. . Remember, what he wins you with he will have to keep you with and looks change over time. Add things like, “Must be able to make me laugh” and “Must not have violent bouts with anger.”  Make sure that any guy you date will hold you to an even higher level of purity than you would want to pursue for yourself…

Whether you are tangoing today or waiting for tomorrow, keep this in mind: God desires what’s best for you. He wants to give you a relationship that will model His love for you in earthly form. He did not spare His Son Jesus the first time around; I don’t think He’ll short you this time, either. 

A good dancer knows that in any performance, no move is as powerful as the pause. So if you feel like you are in between woman and child, single and in love, then practice patience and become a godly woman as you learn the art of the divine pause. 

What Do You Do With What Threatens You?

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

workoutA few years ago, my friend Sarah Bragg released a fabulous book entitled Body, Beauty, Boys: The Truth About Girls and How We See Ourselves.

As I was rummaging around in my garage a few weeks ago, I discovered three giveaway copies that I never gave out. So, today is your lucky day.

Three people who comment on today’s post will be chosen by a random number generator and will receive a free copy of Sarah’s awesome book. You must comment no later than midnight on Saturday, August 22nd to be entered in the contest.

In Body. Beauty. Boys. Sarah said something that really stuck out to me: “Make a habit of celebrating publicly what threatens you privately.”  Wise words we could all do good to live by. In my interactions with Sarah I have seen this practice to be true in her life. Her authenticity is part of what makes the statement so profound.

What about you? If you are anything like me, I am sure the last thing you want to do when something someone else does threatens you is go out and celebrate it. But why is that? What is so hard about celebrating other people and their success?

Because of things as simple as getting an “A” on a test or getting asked to the prom, people turn on us. And we turn on them. We act as if someone else’s good news is our bad news even if their good news really doesn’t affect us much at all.

We don’t just want to be our best. We want to be the best. And if someone else is at his or her best, it doesn’t matter if we are at our best too. Their best threatens our best and we freak out.

You might be reading this thinking that you can relate more to being the one who gets turned on rather than the one who turns on others. But I would venture to say that all of us have spent a fair amount of time on both sides of the equation.

So this week do something to change that. Celebrate publicly what threatens you privately. And don’t be fake about it. That cancels out the whole thing. If your friend scores higher on a test than you do, then genuinely congratulate her—even if she is being a brat and gloating about the whole thing.

Other people’s actions and reactions are not our responsibility, but we are accountable for ourselves. So even when others choose to do you wrong, take it in stride and respond by doing what is right.

And remember, someone else’s success is not a personal attack on you. It’s simply his or her way of living life the way it was meant to be lived—at his or her best. So instead of getting emotional about it, raise the bar in your life and go out there and live life at your best too.  

What threatens you privately? How do you normally handle the things that threaten you? What can you do this week to publicly celebrate the success of someone else?

Praying for Your Future Husband While You Wait For Him

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Praying

Sometimes it can be so frustrating to watch all of your friends pairing off and getting boyfriends—especially when a school dance or other big event comes along.

Even though the man who will one day sweep you off your feet isn’t in your life today, it is important to remember that he is out there somewhere and you can be praying for him. The odds are in your favor, most people aren’t called to celibacy. Chances are you probably will get married even if it takes awhile.

 The years spent waiting for your future husband don’t have to be wasted. On Wednesday we talked about how those years can be put to good use. But there’s another thing I want to mention before the week is out.

Every day you spend waiting is a day you can spend praying. I seriously began praying for the man I would marry when I was in college. Maybe it was the swarm of unattractive and immature guys around me that prompted me to pray for the man I would call mine. But I think it was something more than that.

I regularly prayed that the man God would have for me would have certain character qualities—patience, kindness, gentleness, godliness, etc…And I also prayed for his purity and that the Lord would be drawing him into a deeper relationship with Himself.

But there’s a period of months that still stands out distinctly in my mind. During that time I was prompted to pray that God would show my future husband that the relationship he was in was harmful and destructive. I wrote out a series of prayers in my journal asking God to give this man—whom I didn’t know—strength and resolve to end the relationship. I felt so strongly that this is what I should be praying that I prayed these prayers every night—and I wrote about them and dated them in my journal.

Years later when I began dating my husband the topic of past relationships came up. He only had one—during that very same period of months. It was destructive and he ended the relationship right around the time my burden to pray those prayers stopped. (My old journals serve as a written testimony in case there are any skeptics out there.)

I will never forget the look of amazement on Michael’s face when I told him about my old journals and those prayers. He was stunned and overcome with emotion all at the same time. The fact that God could be prompting my heart to pray about specific circumstances in his life when I didn’t even know him was truly an amazing thing.

So, take some time (it doesn’t have to be every day) and pray for your future husband. Ask God to build traits of godliness in him and make him a strong leader. Pray that God will give him boldness—especially when it comes to pursuing you when the time is right. Don’t be afraid to pray for his sexual purity and protection even from pure relationships with the wrong girls.

You may be amazed at what God will do. Keep a written record of your prayers with a date next to them so that someday you can have a written testimony of what God did in your love story long before you even knew the man you would marry.

What are some things you can (or do) pray for your future husband? Do you do anything special like keep a journal of letters to him? What are some ways you can take your longing for a relationship and turn it into something productive?

The Upside of Singleness

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

happy girl

Although contrary to popular belief among girls who really just want a boyfriend, there are some pluses to being single.That’s right.

Today I’m going to highlight just three. Then I want you to chime in and share even more positives aspects of being single in the comments section below. Deal?

1. Being single allows you to figure out who you are apart from someone else. Sometimes dating teens stop focusing on who they are as people and instead focus all of their efforts on who they are as half of a couple. Their identity becomes so entangled with their relationship that they no longer know who they are apart from it.

But, if you are single (even unwillingly so), you can spend time exploring your likes and dislikes, your talents and passions and even some of the spiritual gifts God may have given you. If you’re in high school or junior college being single can be a real blessing when it comes to determining which university you want to attend. I know more than one girl who changed her plans due to a guy and I often wonder if those girls ever had regrets—especially if their relationships didn’t work out.  

So, use this time to ask God who He has made you and what He has made you for. Before I ever met my husband I graduated from college, wrote two books and was walking in God’s calling on my life. In hindsight, I’m glad Michael didn’t come into my life sooner. I might have missed out on some pretty cool things if he had.

2. Being single allows you freedom to minister in ways you might not be able to otherwise. 1 Corinthians 7:34 says, “…the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit. But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband.If you think about that for a moment that’s a pretty powerful verse. It’s saying that someone in your position (singleness) has more freedom to focus on the Lord and minister to others than someone in my position (marriage).

I see this play out in my own life all the time. When I was single it was a lot easier to plan my speaking calendar. Back then I wasn’t trying to coordinate around someone else’s schedule (Michael normally comes with me when I speak and we significantly limit the amount of times a year each of us travels without the other one).

Now that I’m married my approach to ministry has changed because my marriage is one of my most important ministries. Sure I still get to write, speak and do missions work. But not with the same freedom I had when I was single. Don’t waste your singleness. Jump into serving God with everything you have right now. Invest in other people instead of wallowing in your loneliness.  

3. Being single allows you to invest deeply in other relationships. When you start dating someone—and especially when you marry someone—your relationships with other people change. Your time becomes more limited because you suddenly find yourself wanting to spend every waking minute with your significant other.

In college I had some really good girlfriends. We used to take trips together, get together weekly for coffee and share the deepest details of our lives with each other. The dynamic changed drastically when one of the girls got married and another became engaged. Our lives went in different directions. But I still keep a framed photo from one of our trips near my desk because every time I look at it I am reminded of one of the sweetest and most rewarding seasons of my life.

Had I been dating during my college years I would have missed out on some rich relationships. Those were the girls I stayed up late into the night with pondering the big questions in life.

Those are just three reasons you should take the time to stop and appreciate your singleness today.

What are some other reasons? Make a list of things you can do (or do more easily) when you are single and share them in the comments section. What are some things you are thankful for in your season of singleness?

Surrendering Your Singleness

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Sadness

I was the girl who went through high school and college without a boyfriend.

Technically, I guess I kind of dated one guy for a few weeks my freshman year of college but as a good friend put it, “We don’t consider that dating. We call that a mistake.”

My lack of male suitors even prompted some of my college friends to vote me “Most Likely to Get Married Last.” There were moments when I felt as if I would never get married. Some nights I cried myself to sleep thinking something must surely be wrong with me.

Because of that I have compassion when I receive emails from readers who write to me about the heartache they suffer as they watch everyone else pair off while they remain alone. Last week I got about a dozen of those emails.

One of them reminded me of something I wrote long ago—while I was still single—about the subject. Buried toward the back of God Called a Girl is a poem I wrote when I was nineteen entitled New Start.

This week we’re going to talk about how to deal with singleness when all we want to do is date somebody. I’ll kick off the week by sharing my poem. Hopefully it ministers to some of you today.

I come to the alter with no Isaac to bring

Just the desire to be loved and the hope for a ring

I’ve waited, I’ve worried, and I’ve failed to trust

So take from me this desire and teach me as You must

All alone before You, my heart I spill

With laughter and tears this empty vessel fill

I am looking, Lord, no longer for a man

But now to You and what You have planned

I am gifted and growing and I want to serve You

Just show me where to go and who to serve as I seek to follow through

And if alone You want me, for years to come

Isolate and teach me what is to be done

 I can’t fight You any longer, I am too weak

I am done with fool’s gold and real treasure I seek

I want You, O Lord, to put a twinkle in my eye

I want You to be my focus and not any other guy

But even as I write this, part of me holds back

Help me to see that singleness is a blessing and not an attack

Lord, help me not to feel worthless, unblessed and alone

Help me to throw my cares at the foot of Your throne

As You want me to wait, Lord, please put a hold on my heart

Help me not to give it away to someone who will tear it apart

As I lay my desire down at your feet

Help me to be honest and my promises keep

Help me in loneliness to focus on the cross

And when I feel left out, help me count it as loss

I don’t want to struggle; I am too tired to fight

Help me to keep on and do what is right

Remove from me this jealousy and replace it with joy

Fill my thoughts with You, O Lord, instead of a boy

On the alter of sacrifice I place my desire

And I ask, Lord, right now that You’d burn it with fire

Please accept it, O Lord, for it is all I have to give

Help me to let go of this bondage and truly live

Take all of me, Lord, even when I am opposed

Help me to trust in You, the One who always knows

On my knees I fall, with tears on my face

And I ask, Lord, only that You’d meet me in this place

Altars are for bloodshed so, Lord, here’s my heart

Take it from me now and grant me a new start  

How do you deal with unwanted singleness? What are some verses you cling to when you feel all alone? If you are no longer single, how did God use your years of waiting to prepare you for a shared future with someone else? If you’ve written a poem or a prayer about your unwanted singleness feel free to share it below.

Fan Mail Friday: Spiritual Gifts & Unattractive Guys

Friday, July 24th, 2009

You’re probably wondering what spiritual gifts have to do with unattractive guys. Nothing. In this episode of Fan Mail Friday I answer two questions about entirely different subjects. Those happen to be the subjects.

Now, I want to add a disclaimer to this video. It was my first time using my new camera and the software that came with it. So, this video isn’t absolutely stunning. My angle is a little crooked, the transitions are a bit choppy and for some reason there’s a popping sound when I talk that wasn’t there in the raw footage.

I’ll work on all of those things. Hopefully, these videos improve with time. Your questions are also a huge part of whether Fan Mail Friday is a failure or a success. So don’t be shy. Send me your questions at fanmailfriday AT beingagirlbooks.com (replace AT with @). You can ask me about anything–writing, the Bible, personal questions or any topic you happen to be curious about.

Right now I plan to post a new Fan Mail Friday vlog on the 4th Friday of each month. But if I get more questions than I can answer in one vlog, I’ll expand to doing Fan Mail Friday twice a month. Really, it’s up to you.

So, enjoy and have fun with it!

(If you read this blog via RSS, email or Facebook and you can’t see the video, pop over here and check it out!)