Thursday, December 18, 2014

The Brandie Equation

Posted this today on Facebook and wanted to share it here.

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THE BRANDIE EQUATION

Brandie Chism Yokie is a part of us all.

Our lives, who we all are at this moment, have been profoundly shaped by our relationships with Brandie.

Think about it. She had a gift for connecting people... Rachael wouldn't have grown to adore a Tennessee fan. Amy and Joey wouldn't be together. Matthew wouldn't have Addison or have experienced the kind of love we all spend our lives searching for. Karen wouldn't be as awesome of a mother or the kind person she is today. I wouldn't be as happy or as whole with my Hubs Rod or be as close to my family Corbin, Elijah, Tricia and Diane. I wouldn't know Tina or Kim or Jimmy or any of the other amazing friends without her.

And she also had a gift for making us stronger. I'm certain each of us can point to at least one moment where we wouldn't have been as brave, would have given up or given in, had she not intervened and encouraged.

I could go on and on for days, naming all of the things and the people that wouldn't be connected or even affected without her presence, including myself... For I simply would not be alive today without her friendship, I wouldn't know the freedom I enjoy today without her loyalty and trust, and I damn sure would not love the way I do had she not shown me how through her example in loving me. In fact, many of us wouldn't even know each other had it not been for Brandie. In many ways, she was the key between us through which SO MUCH LOVE passed, and by which so many other doors to awesome things and people were opened.

Life is nothing more than a series of moments, woven together by the significance of the ones we are lucky enough to recognize while we are in them. Brandie was like that one thread that weaves through the fabric of each life, connecting the moments of threads in all our lives together. She made it whole, and made us one. As you know, the sum of the whole is greater than the parts, and she was the variable that made it possible.

I said this in another post recently, but I'll say it again as I feel it more poignantly today, on her birthday... I am a person to whom words MATTER. A GREAT deal. One of my gifts Brandie helped me to embrace was my ability to shape words and thoughts and phrases in a way that touch and move others. She helped me find my voice and encouraged me to help others find theirs.

Yet oddly enough, when it comes right down to it, I, the journalism major, the poet, the songwriter, the speaker, the storyteller... I am unable to find the words that I feel do true justice to who Brandie was or what she meant to me. To all of us.

The thing that would crack her up right now is that "Ms. Wordy" has to resort to MATH to express herself...

And that is this:
Each of us is like a delicate equation, and Brandie was the variable without which we would not be who we all are or where we all are today.

I say again: We are all who we are because Brandie was a part of our lives.

THAT is the only math I can truly understand. The math of love, expressed in friendship, in families, in a mother for her child, between a wife and a husband, a love that turns strangers into close friends. The math by which Jesus brings us together. The math equation that uses a single variable at its most exponential power, through love, to ensure that no matter what you've been through, no matter what lies behind or before you, you (we) are not alone. Because love always makes room for more love... Heretofore known as The Brandie Equation.

Thank you, Brandisha Nicole Chism Yokie, for being that variable. Thank you for being our Bishaboo. Thank you for helping me understand MATH! We love and miss you so much! The only thing keeping me going today is the thought of seeing you again, reliving the laughter and the memories we made, and sharing in the love of all those who are in my life now because I knew and was loved by you.

Happy birthday, Pink Crayon!
























Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Testimony begins with TEST

Found this blog entry from 2013 today, inspired by my friend Brandie Chism Yokie, who died this past Sunday. I am going to repost it because I think with all we are going through trying to deal with her death, we have to hold onto Jesus because we may not understand why, and we know it's unfair, but we KNOW that God NEVER permits us to go through anything that isn't ultimately good for us. Period. I don't like that truth AT ALL right now, but I don't question it. Luckily, I don't have to like it to trust it. Trust HIM.

This particular message is one she and I talked about a lot in the last few months, and trust me, Brandie was one of the bravest, strongest, funniest, most honest and loyal people I have ever known. And every ounce of happiness and peace and awesomeness that she had when she died--she earned EVERY SINGLE BIT OF IT.

I miss her so much.

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I am totally posting today's devo from Joyce Meyer Ministries. Love me some Joyce! And everyone needs to be reminded from time to time that adversity reveals character as much as it forms character. As my incredible friend Brandie once told me when I was freaking out over something, "Jen, you are in RECOVERY. Of course you are being TESTED! How can you possibly learn to live in recovery unless you are tested?!?" Thank God for those friends that kind of just put it to you straight right when you need it, eh? :D

She told me that day, when I called her wigging out: No one ever has a testimony without a TEST. Then today I saw this and called her, and Brandie and I laughed and laughed about how SMART she is! :D

Enjoy today's post. I am posting this exactly as I found it, except for highlighting the parts that I think are most relevant. These can be found at http://joycemeyer.org/Articles/Devotional.aspx.
________________________________________

Testimony Begins with "Test"
by Joyce Meyer - posted October 16, 2013

Consider it wholly joyful, my brethren, whenever you are enveloped in or encounter trials of any sort or fall into various temptations. —James 1:2

I'm sure you know people with amazing stories of the way God has worked in their lives. I always love to hear a great testimony, but I also know that behind every extraordinary account of someone's life lies some kind of challenge or difficulty. No one ever has a testimony without a test.

We must pass all kinds of tests as we go through our lives, and passing them is part of never giving up. It's vital for us to understand the important role that tests and trials play in our lives, because understanding them helps us endure them and actually be strengthened by them. Everything God permits us to go through will ultimately be good for us—no matter how much it hurts, how unfair it is, or how difficult it is.

When we encounter tests and trials, if we will embrace them and refuse to run from them, we will learn some lessons that will help us in the future and make us stronger.

One reason we must go through trials is to test our quality (1 Pet. 4:12). Often, we find ourselves wishing we had the faith of Sister so-and-so or Brother so-and-so. I can assure you, if they have a strong and vibrant faith, they did not develop it easily. Just as muscles are strengthened through exercise, firm faith comes from the furnace of affliction.

Sometimes people say to me, "Oh, I wish I had the kind of ministry you have, Joyce." Well, I did not get it by wishing. These people didn't see when I was feeling I couldn't hold on one more second, begging God to help me to not quit or give up. They don't know the tests and trials I've faced along the way.

No one who does anything worthwhile for God has traveled an easy road. Doing great things for God requires character, and character is developed by passing life's tests and staying faithful to Him through the trials.

Trust in Him: God has a unique plan for your life. Trust Him when you go through tests, knowing that they are strengthening and preparing you for the great things He has planned specifically for you.
________________________________________

From the book Trusting God Day by Day by Joyce Meyer. Copyright © 2012 by Joyce Meyer. Published by FaithWords. All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

When you don't know what to say, just say JESUS

Here are the lyrics to "Just Say Jesus" by 7eventh Time Down. Such a REAL song. Everyone has been there; where it hurts so bad and so deep that there are just no words... Except one: Jesus! And it's the only one you need.

Please do yourself a favor and look this song up and listen to it! Incredible.

JUST SAY JESUS
7eventh Time Down

Life gets tough, and times get hard
It's hard to find the truth in all the lies

If you're tired of wondering why
Your heart isn't healing
And nothing feels like home
Cause you're lost and alone just screaming at the sky

When you don't know what to say
Just say Jesus
There is power in the name
The name of Jesus
If the words won't come
Cause you're too afraid to pray
Just say Jesus

Whisper it now, or shout it out
However it comes out, He hears your cry

Out of nowhere He will come,
You got to believe it
He will rescue you
Just call out to The Way, The Truth, The Light

When you don't know what to say
Just say Jesus
There is power in the name
The name of Jesus
If the words won't come
Cause you're too afraid to pray
There is just one name
Strong enough to save
There is just one name
There is just one name
Jesus

When you don't know what to say
Just say Jesus
There's still power in the name
The name of Jesus
If the words won't come
Cause you're too afraid to pray
If the words won't come
And you don't know what to say
Just say Jesus

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Testimony begins with TEST!

I am totally posting today's devo from Joyce Meyer Ministries. Love me some Joyce! And everyone needs to be reminded from time to time that adversity reveals character as much as it forms character. As my incredible friend Brandie once told me when I was freaking out over something, "Jen, you are in RECOVERY. Of course you are being TESTED! How can you possibly learn to live in recovery unless you are tested?!?" Thank God for those friends that kind of just put it to you straight right when you need it, eh? :D

Enjoy today's post. I am posting this exactly as I found it, except for highlighting the parts that I think are most relevant. These can be found at http://joycemeyer.org/Articles/Devotional.aspx.
________________________________________

Testimony Begins with "Test"
by Joyce Meyer - posted October 16, 2013

Consider it wholly joyful, my brethren, whenever you are enveloped in or encounter trials of any sort or fall into various temptations. —James 1:2

I'm sure you know people with amazing stories of the way God has worked in their lives. I always love to hear a great testimony, but I also know that behind every extraordinary account of someone's life lies some kind of challenge or difficulty. No one ever has a testimony without a test.

We must pass all kinds of tests as we go through our lives, and passing them is part of never giving up. It's vital for us to understand the important role that tests and trials play in our lives, because understanding them helps us endure them and actually be strengthened by them. Everything God permits us to go through will ultimately be good for us—no matter how much it hurts, how unfair it is, or how difficult it is.

When we encounter tests and trials, if we will embrace them and refuse to run from them, we will learn some lessons that will help us in the future and make us stronger.

One reason we must go through trials is to test our quality (1 Pet. 4:12). Often, we find ourselves wishing we had the faith of Sister so-and-so or Brother so-and-so. I can assure you, if they have a strong and vibrant faith, they did not develop it easily. Just as muscles are strengthened through exercise, firm faith comes from the furnace of affliction.

Sometimes people say to me, "Oh, I wish I had the kind of ministry you have, Joyce." Well, I did not get it by wishing. These people didn't see when I was feeling I couldn't hold on one more second, begging God to help me to not quit or give up. They don't know the tests and trials I've faced along the way.

No one who does anything worthwhile for God has traveled an easy road. Doing great things for God requires character, and character is developed by passing life's tests and staying faithful to Him through the trials.

Trust in Him: God has a unique plan for your life. Trust Him when you go through tests, knowing that they are strengthening and preparing you for the great things He has planned specifically for you.
________________________________________

From the book Trusting God Day by Day by Joyce Meyer. Copyright © 2012 by Joyce Meyer. Published by FaithWords. All rights reserved.


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Freedom and Independence

There was a time when my entire worldview was rooted in what others thought or felt about me. When I looked in the mirror, I saw whatever others told me was there. Even if I disagreed, I owned their opinions as truth. This led to exhaustion and confusion, since I tried to please everyone and lost who I was in the process.

That approach to life made me a prisoner, and the codependence was so ingrained that I was incapable of making even the tiniest decisions on my own. It also rendered me mute, and the only way I could express anything was to explode in anger. That never turned out well. I didn't understand that by always seeing myself through others' eyes instead of through God's, I was giving away the power over my mind and my life to people who couldn't be trusted with it. My every thought, word or choice was merely a reaction to someone else's opinion, yet I was convinced I was nobody's puppet.  

As you can imagine, that led to heartache so deep that it was hard to breathe or think, and not just for me. My unwillingness to deal with reality cost those I love a great deal as well. And that just wasn't fair.

God wants us to have faith in Him and Him alone. He will and does provide all things, including a way out of a bad or dangerous situation. But we have to be willing to walk through that door when it opens. Faith, trust in the Lord and obedience are essential to freedom and independence. And Celebrate Recovery gave me the practical tools to walk that faith out and to practice trust in and obedience to God on a daily basis, and as a result, my whole life changed.

Today, my freedom and independence no longer depend on acts of defiance or confrontation. They depend solely on my own attitudes and feelings, which are continually submitted to and led by Christ. If I am always reacting, then I am never free.

This is why I am vehemently unwilling to go back to the way it was. I'm doggedly determined not to let anyone into my life who thrives on conflict and domination, and insists on being in control of everything and everyone. Because that personality ABSORBS people. They want access and control to every single corner and surface of your life. These people have a script, and your job is to read from it, word for word, with no inflection, no reaction, and definitely without question! Cracking the door even the tiniest bit for such an individual paves the way for that person to consume you, and once they get a foothold, they OWN youand that makes you a hostage, not a friend. They say they want love and are all about loving you. What they really want is a slave who will be subject to their every whim, and what's more, they will believe wholeheartedly that you owe them that.

No one deserves to live like that. No one deserves to be treated that way. But living freely and independently are totally up to you. People like this are totally unable to TAKE your power. It can only be gained and used if you give it to them.

The only way to keep your freedom and independence, and to prevent someone like this from getting a stranglehold on your life, is to stick close to Jesus. You must be dedicated at every moment to reality at all costs. You have to take responsibility for yourself and your choices. Otherwise, you are a prime target for the kind of person who is too scared to be a real person on his or her own, and they will set it up so they can live vicariously through you.

I'm grateful for the lessons I've learned, the gifts I was given through such relationships, and the freedom and independence I now have that those relationships are over. Praise Jesus!

Thursday, August 29, 2013

BRAVE: An Anthem

A few years ago, I posted a video of this dance, crafted by an incredible choreographer, Mia Michaels, that appeared on SYTYCD. This amazing, moving, jaw-dropping piece told the story of addiction. The song that Kayla and Kupono danced to was called "Gravity" by a singer/songwriter I was unfamiliar with until I saw that dance and heard that song. Her name is Sara Bareilles.

I shared the video on this blog because I was not long into Celebrate Recovery, and the entire experience--the song, the lyric, the dance, all of it--seemed to express how I felt in ways better than my words ever could about my journey in recovery and in growing ever closer to the Lord. It was one of those things where it was really a message straight from God, and I knew it. I have loved Sara Bareilles ever since. She's one of the best singer/songwriters, in my opinion, EVER.

There are just those times in life when a song is what gets you through, and anchors that time into your memory forever. When you hear it, it STOPS you in your tracks! It SPEAKS to you. It MOVES you. You MUST get that song and learn the lyric IMMEDIATELY, and you cannot do or say or think anything else until you do. Then you wear it OUT, playing it over and over and over and over again... And forevermore, when you hear that song, you will recall that time and that experience. As Trisha Yearwood sang, "The song remembers when."

Well, this week, the same thing happened with a song that was just released, and ironically enough, it's by Sara Bareilles. I was in Starbucks last week, and on the counter was her new CD. I made a note to come back and buy it (along with one of their salted caramel cake pops!). But I got busy and it slipped my mind. I didn't think about it again until my friend sent me this song yesterday. She posted it and made sure I'd see it. She had no idea who Sara Bareilles is, or that I love her and her music. She just heard the song and thought, Jen needs to hear this!

That was totally a God thing, because I DID need to hear it. Right then. As soon as I heard it, I had to literally pull the car over because I couldn't see through the tears! You know those moments when you KNOW God is speaking directly to you?!?!? I've been struggling terribly and painfully with something this year... A situation in which I was afraid for a long time to speak my mind or deal directly with what was in front of me, but this year God turned all of that around. I've had to keep my mouth shut, and my ears open, my heart connected and my spirit linked to Christ. It took a while, but finally everything came together and lined up and I knew exactly what God was saying to me. Jesus freed my mind from the maze it was in, freed my thoughts from gridlock--He set me FREE. AGAIN. I've felt in the last few weeks more freedom than I can even describe--and I didn't think that was possible! But it is! Truth is the most beautiful thing! Even when it's ugly.

It's been quite a journey. Incredibly painful. Mind-boggingly (is that a word?) real. But LIBERATING. As the truth always is. Now that I'm here in this place, I can't imagine how I stayed so long in that crazy spot. It's an exceptionally LONG story, and I'll probably blog about the things I've learned... But I'm not certain I'll ever be able to describe the highs and the lows of the roller coaster I have been on this year! And I wouldn't change a single thing.

So yesterday, when I heard this song... It floored me. Stopped me in my tracks. I knew from the first 2 lines in the song that this was a God thing! Another anthem for this time in my life... by one of my absolute favorite artists on the planet, delivered through my Pink Crayon, and given to me by God Himself. And just because God knows me well and how slow I can be to get a point, He drove the message home by putting Sara's new CD in front of me again at Starbucks this morning. LOL! Thank You, Lord, for the extra effort You put in for us slow ones!

I am posting the video to "Brave" and the lyric below it. (If you cannot view this video here, view it on YouTube. There's a short ad in the front, but keep watching!) If you aren't familiar with Sara Bareilles, GET familiar! You owe it to yourself! This video is the acoustic version that she did live, but you should definitely get her new album, The Blessed Unrest, like, now. And of course, don't you know "Brave" is the very first song on the album! Message from God: DELIVERED! The version on the album is the pop version and it is awesome! I like acoustic better, but any way you hear this song is very worth it.

Then read the lyric and figure out what areas in YOUR life and/or what people you need to get BRAVE with! For me, I'll forevermore remember this time in my life when I hear this song... And how so often, the times you are being the most brave is when you are the most scared. But there is no freedom that isn't precipitated by bravery in some form.

Be free! Be yourself. Always. And be BRAVE!

Love, JEN




Brave 
You can be amazing
You can turn a phrase into a weapon or a drug
You can be the outcast
Or be the backlash of somebody's lack of love
Or you can start speaking up
Nothing's gonna hurt you the way that words do
When they settle 'neath your skin
Kept on the inside and no sunlight
Sometimes the shadow wins
But I wonder what would happen if you

Say what you wanna say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

With what you want to say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I wanna see you be brave

I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I wanna see you be brave

Everybody's been there,
Everybody's been stared down by the enemy
Fallen for the fear and done some disappearing,
Bow down to the mighty
Don't run, stop holding your tongue
Maybe there's a way out of the cage where you live
Maybe one of these days you can let the light in
Show me how big your brave is

Say what you wanna say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

With what you want to say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

And since your history of silence
Won't do you any good,
Did you think it would?
Let your words be
anything but empty
Why don't you tell them the truth?

Say what you wanna say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

With what you want to say
And let the words fall out
Honestly I wanna see you be brave

I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I wanna see you be brave

I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you
I just wanna see you

I wanna see you be brave

Monday, May 13, 2013

Happy Mother's Day

"Isn't it funny how day to day nothing changes, but when you look back, everything is different?"

The kids woke me up on Mother's Day yesterday with hugs and kisses and cards and I love you's. As I sat drinking my coffee at the dining room table, I was looking at my oldest son's last high school yearbook and reflecting on this past year, and on the big week coming up that was starting with lunch at my in-laws and Corbin's Baccalaureate service that afternoon. Paging through the yearbook, I was flooded with memories, and I felt so many things: happiness, pride, contentment, joy... but mostly, I was sad.

Even though I've been planning for this week for what seems like forever, suddenly it's happening really fast. Too fast. Corbin is in the Collierville High School Praise Band, and he sang beautifully during yesterday's service. So many people complimented me on my son... how incredible his voice is, how crazy handsome he is, what an awesome young man he has become, how he's such a joy to be around because he's comfortable in his own skin and so funny, how he will be sorely missed in the halls of Collierville high, how he's made such an impact on so many people because he's one of those kids that really and truly cares about other people. I got pats on the back for a job well done, but the real credit goes to Jesus.

Of course I am crazy proud of Corbin. But even though he's 18 and a full head taller than I am now, complete with a driver's license all his own, all I can see is his sweet little face on a big wheel! We sat on the couch last night looking through his prom photos, laughing because he's such a goofball. (The kid definitely isn't afraid to look like an idiot!) We also looked at old photos of he and Eli when they were little, laughing at all the memories of this funny thing or that hilarious moment. I had to fight tears off all day because neither of them are little anymore. Eli is headed to sixth grade, and Corbin is growing up and making plans for work and college, and it's all just too bittersweet for words.

That was only yesterday. Also coming up this week are CHS Senior Awards night (Corbin is getting an award but we don't know what it is yet), fifth grade "graduation" activities for Eli, CHS Graduation ceremonies for Corbin on Saturday afternoon, Project Graduation on Saturday night (a lock-in for seniors so they can spend one last night together), then Corbin takes off for Florida with one of his best friends and their family for ten days. That's a LOT of endings in one week! The end of my first born child being a kid. The end of me being mom to a kid in elementary school. One is a young man now, going off into the world to find his place in it. One is still a boy on the verge of adolescence, moving into middle school where he'll struggle with his identity and individuality.

The hardest part of any ending is starting again. So I guess the sadness is overwhelming because this time we are in right now is such a short season, and it's both an ending and a beginning... I came to the mommy party a little late, but I've loved every second of it. As ALL of my kiddos (stepkids included) told me yesterday the different ways I've loved them, helped them, made them feel special, my heart filled with a joy I never thought I'd experience.

Mother's Day is a special holiday to me because it's not really even ABOUT me. My name is on the card, but I'M the lucky one!

C.S. Lewis is the one who said, "Isn't it funny how day by day nothing changes, but when you look back, everything is different?" We move through life day by day, and things happen and we live... And changes happen that we don't always take notice of in the moment. The kids grow. We get older. Summers come, summers go. Back to school. Tests, homework, projects. Activities at church and with friends and family. Holidays. The new year. Spring break. More tests, homework, extracurricular activities. Last day of school. Another summer... Then we do it all again. The kids grow; they need new clothes, new shoes because they've outgrown everything it seems you just bought. We move through the cycles and then, while we were living this life where it all seemed the same, suddenly it's THE END and you look back on all of it, and somehow it's all different. YOU are different. That little boy has become a young man. When did it happen? How did it happen? Where was I when this kid grew like six whole inches?!?!? He wants the car keys and all you can think is: What happened to the big wheel?!? It's like we are aware, but we are not aware.

I think we have to try and be more conscious in our daily lives of the changes taking place around us and within us, and the motivations behind what we do or don't do. I think one of the biggest reasons I'm so sad (other than the obvious natural order of such things) is that because I did come to the mommy party so late, I cannot help but look back on the times I could have had with Corbin, the things I could have experienced with him, the things that I missed. For a whole host of ridiculous reasons. I was so closed off for so long, holding onto hurt and false ideas that kept me from opening my heart to my children the way they deserved. The way you MUST if you want to be a GOOD mom. If you don't open your heart and mind to Christ, then you cannot truly love anyone, even your children. And that is the one thing our kids need more desperately than they need anything else. Because how children view, relate to and experience God as adults is directly tied to what they grew up with under their parents. A kid's entire relationship to God is learned from his or her family. Fathers shape a child's view of God as THE Father, and his or her sense of security and response to authority comes directly from that.

But it is a mother who teaches a child of God's love. It is our responsibility, therefore, as mothers to have a heart open to God so our children will as well. If our hearts are open to Christ, then we feel loved, and that translates directly into how we love our kids. It's a tremendous responsibility and it's also a tremendous opportunity. I kinda blew it. I missed that opportunity for a long, long time. So I look back, and feel the regrets on what I did wrong with Corbin. But that also makes me incredibly grateful for the times I DID get to have with him, the experiences we DID share. Even if I did try to cram a lot of them into the last few years we've had together.

Eli and my stepkids are getting a totally different mom experience than Corbin did because they are younger and God changed my life while they were at an earlier age. They are getting to have a totally different mom than Corbin did--a BETTER mom. And the regrets over what I did wrong with Corbin, along with the gratitude over what I did right, make me stone cold resolved NOT to miss those times and experiences with my other children.

God has given me incredible gifts in my marriage to my husband. Rod himself is pretty dang awesome. But in addition to Eli, I also have four other kids that I get to share this life with, extra experiences and times I get to have with all of the other kids. Of course it won't make up for what I missed with Corbin. But it will make it more real and more special than it would have been, I think. Because I am more aware of where I went wrong and what I could have done differently or better. And also more aware of what I did RIGHT.

Corbin has every right to be angry and to resent the things I do now that I did not do with him. But he's not and he doesn't. I hugged my oldest son yesterday and cried a little bit as I told him how much I love him and, again, how sorry I am for the mistakes I've made.

Corbin responded to that by saying that while he appreciates that I'm sorry for all of my mistakes, he thinks I should give myself more credit. In fact, he told me that even when I was struggling to get my crap together, or even when I was "a little bit of a flake," he has always known how much I love him, that I would do anything in the world for him and that I am there for him, no matter what. He said that he has seen changes in me in the last few years that have made him extremely proud of me because he knows how hard it was for me to change. He also said that because I was open, real and transparent about all of it during the process, that I've helped him learn and grow in his own life as he's watched how I handle and deal and applied those lessons. He said that watching me learn to love God and to be loved by God has helped him to do the same. He told me that he loves me very much, that I'm awesome and the best mom in the world. And--as if I wasn't already boohooing enough by now--that it didn't matter that I was late to the mommy party because once I showed up, I more than made up for lost time. He said, and I quote, "So it's okay that you were 'late.' God had to do some stuff in your heart and in your life; He had to work on who you are. And the person you have become, Mom, was very much worth the wait."

Wow, right?!? :) Turns out my hubster thinks I'm a pretty great mom, too. That's what the phenomenal card he gave me said!

So, as I think about what Lewis said, and about all that's happened in the last few years, and about all that is happening this week and the rest of this month with the life transitions we are all going through, and about all that I've learned and am learning, and about how much I love my kids and my family, and about all that God has done and is still doing... Somehow, it's all different now. Very different. And it's GOOD.

As I said, Mother's Day is a cool holiday because it's not really about mothers, in one sense. To me, Mother's Day is about the people our kids become when we love them well. Because one of the biggest things I've learned about being a GOOD mom is that it's not about me. It's about THEM. It's about my kids; it's about getting over and past myself enough to put them first, and to do to the very best of my ability whatever it takes for them to be okay. It's about worshiping the Lord openly and honestly, and staying as close to Him as possible so I can be the best me that I can be. Because the best gift a mom can give her kids is to be the very best version of herself in Christ.

Once I stopped making everything about me, put Jesus first and got my priorities in order, let Him heal me and transform me, I got a new heart and a new mind and a new direction in life. Oddly enough, it's just not as hard to do that as I thought it would be. In fact, when you put Jesus first, everything else sort of falls in line behind that. When you do that, it's just not hard to love. Period.

And if you stay close to Jesus and keep on doing what is right, you get to hear things like, "I love you, Mom. You're the best. Thank you for everything you've done and still do for me. I wouldn't trade you for any other mother in the whole universe."

Even though your kids had to wait on you, you get to hear things like, "It's okay, Mom. Because the person you have become was worth the wait."

Thank You, Jesus! I love you, and I love my family. Thank You for transforming me into the kind of person that my husband, my kids and my family love and can be proud of. None of it would be possible without YOU!

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"Her children arise and call her blessed;
her husband, also, and he praises her:
'Many women do noble things.
But you surpass them all.'"
Proverbs 31:28-29