Showing posts with label Contentment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contentment. Show all posts

My Major Problem with a Mini Promo


As our family waits for The Hobbit to start, five words in a pre-movie advertisement turn me into a crazy person.


Five words make me spontaneously shout, “That’s not true!”

(Which makes my son try to shrink his 6’ frame and my daughter try to shush me.)

It’s not the advertiser’s fault that their fancy five word phrase catches me the wrong way today. They’re just doing their job: selling fun, risk, and hope.

But tears sting my eyes as I furiously text a note to self:

"For me, 'Normal can never be amazing' is a LIE."

Here's why:


A normal Christmas Day would have been amazing.


To have Mother bustling about the kitchen, correcting all my cooking mistakes and calling out, “Harvey, the volume!” when Mozart’s concerto booms too loud in the living room. To have one of her enormous fresh flower arrangements in the middle of the table so we could play to play our yearly game of try-to-talk-through-the-centerpiece.

Instead, I spent four hours cooking alone in Mother’s kitchen while she lay on the couch, only vaguely aware of my presence or identity. 


A normal Monday back-at-school next week would be amazing.

To have Pastor Jon welcome our students back from Christmas break with his warm hugs and just-for-you smile. To have him lead another class discussion about how what the Bible says applies to nitty-gritty everyday living.

Instead, we will be shock-walking from class to class on Monday, in the throes of raw grief, wondering what we will do without the man who has lived the heart of God’s grace in this place for two decades. 


That Daddy is alive and almost back to normal is amazing.

After a New Year’s Day hike took longer than expected, my father fell 50 feet down a ravine where he waited for hours in the freezing darkness until the rescue helicopter was able to airlift him to safety. 

Instead of reeling from a second loss in two days, we are celebrating that his sprained ankle and scalp lacerations are healing.


For me to agree that
  • normal isn’t great...
  • normal isn’t fantastic...
  • normal can never be amazing...

...would say nothing about “normal” but speak volumes about my own capacity 
  • to see greatness.
  • to feel the fantastic.
  • to be amazed.

But I vehemently disagree.

I shouted, “That’s not true!” in the theater, I’ve been rehearsing it in my heart ever since, and I’m pounding it out here for anyone who’s read this far.

Normal can never be amazing” is a lie.

  • After almost 22 years of parenting, I know that one “normal” conversation between my strong-willed daughter and her stubborn-as-a-mule mom (which would be me) is so amazing that it deserves a holiday or postage stamp or fireworks or all three.
  • After a high-risk pregnancy and pre-term delivery, I know that a “normal” birth is mind-bogglingly amazing, and every time (okay, almost every time) my 6’ tall “preemie” annoys me I remember the incubator and am astonished anew.
  • After 25 years of marriage, I know that one more “normal” day together is a startlingly amazing gift to be treasured as if it’s our last...because it just might be. 

Part way through The Hobbit, Gandalf says, “Saruman believes it is only great power that can hold evil in check, but that is not what I have found. I have found it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay. Small acts of kindness and love.”

With this, I whole-heartedly agree.

And I re-commit to intentionally cherish -- by choosing amazement amidst the “normal” -- the people and life I am so lavishly blessed to call mine.


Your Turn:
  • What's your response to "normal can never be amazing"?  (Please feel more than free to disagree with me!)
  • When I invited Facebook friends to agree or disagree with "normal can never be amazing," a whole discussion of definitions ensued. How do you define "normal"?  "amazing"?
  • Anything else on your heart!




Coming in January!
Click here to Sign up to receive Cheri's FREE eBook when it releases!
This Really Got Me Link-up at Rethinking My Thinking

Day 28: CONTENT (My Heart's Contents Control My Contentment)


Each day during The PURSE-onality Challenge: "A Holiday-Ready Heart" in October, Untangling Christmas by Karen Ehman and LeAnn Rice, will be our give-away prize!  

Enter via the Rafflecopter at the end of the blog post or click here to enter!




My language-loving brain has been playing around with today's word.

I realized that "to my heart's content" could have two very different meanings depending on how I pronounce "content."  

So I looked up both pronunciations:

1)  con·tent  [KON-tent]

noun

Usually plural: contents.  Something that is contained: the contents of a box.

Early meaning:  held within


2)  con·tent  [kuhn-TENT]

adjective

satisfied with what one is or has; not wanting more or anything else.

Early meaning:  restrained desires



Then I pondered today's verse:

I know what it is to be in need 
and I know what it is to have plenty. 
I have learned the secret of being content
in any and every situation, 
whether well fed or hungry, 
whether living in plenty or in want.
Philippians 4:12 (NIV)



Clearly, my outer circumstances do not have to dictate my contentment.  

They will when I allow them to! 

But when the correct contents are held within my heart, then I will be content, with all unhealthy desires restrained.

And what are the correct contents?

An old favorite song from when my children were far younger came to mind:

I have the love of Jesus, 
love of Jesus
down in my heart.
(Where?)
Down in my heart!
(Where?)
Down in my heart!

I have the love of Jesus,
love of Jesus, 
down in my heart.
(Where?)
Down in my heart to stay!

And I’m so happy,
so very happy!
I’ve got the love of Jesus 
in my heart!
(Down in my heart)
And I'm so happy,
so very happy!
I’ve got the love of Jesus
in my heart!



Jesus in my Heart

Perhaps this sounds sounds simplistic. 

But I believe it is this simple:

I am content when Jesus is my heart's sole content.

No, it's not easy...at least not for me. 

Not yet.

For decades, I've allowed my external circumstances to dictate my thoughts, my beliefs, my moods, my words, my actions, my reactions.

And the havoc this has wreaked -- in my life and my marriage and my relationship with my children and my friendships -- makes "restrained desires" sound like sweet sweet music to my tired ears.


When Jesus is the Content of Our Hearts

When Jesus is the content of my Sanguine heart, I will be content with the joy He brings in the present moment, with no need to keep seeking or creating more "fun".

When Jesus is the content of my Melancholy heart, I will be content in His perfection, without needing to strive to prove my own.

When Jesus is the content of my Choleric heart, I will be content with His control of my life, with no need to keep trying to get it back.

When Jesus is the content of my Phlegmatic heart, I will be content with His peace that passes all understanding, without needing to play relational peace-faker.

When Jesus is my heart's content, I can say, "My heart's content!" 

In any and every circumstance.



Your Turn:
  • What does "content" mean to you? 
  • What helps you make Jesus your heart's content
  • Anything else on your heart!


    Day 11: MASTERPIECE (+ Being Content With What I DO Have)


    Each day during The PURSE-onality Challenge: "A Holiday-Ready Heart" in October, Untangling Christmas by Karen Ehman and LeAnn Rice, will be our give-away prize!  

    Enter via the Rafflecopter at the end of the blog post or click here to enter!




    I was planning to blog about how easy it is to focus on the externals during the holidays: 
    • Decorating our homes.
    • Wrapping the gifts.
    • Dressing our children and ourselves for special events

    And I was going to admit that I really don't like decorating my home for the holidays...but I didn't really know why!

    Then a couple of catalogs with holiday-themed covers showed up in the mail, and immediately I had my answer:  

    When I decorate for the holidays, I focus on what I don't have rather than what I do have!

    This realization sparked today's 2-part vlog:

    Part 1 talks about the artificial sense of "you need this!" that invades our homes and thoughts during the holiday season.

    Part 2 discusses how each of the four PURSE-onalities can switch her focus from discontent to contentment during the holidays.  


    (Don't see Part 1 of the video? Access A Holiday-Ready Heart Day 11: MASTERPIECE, Part 1 via YouTube!)


    (Don't see Part 2 of the video? Access A Holiday-Ready Heart Day 11: MASTERPIECE, Part 2 via YouTube!)


    Today's verse reminds me that I don't need anything external in order to be content. I am already God's masterpiece. 

    For we are God's masterpiece. 
    He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, 
    so we can do the good things He planned for us long ago. 

    Ephesians 2:10 (NLT)

    I can focus on what I do have because I don't need anything to make me a master chef (or decorator or dresser or...)

    I am already God's masterpiece!


    Your Turn!

    • How well do you focus on what you do have, rather that what you don't have, in general? At the holidays? 
    • How do the holidays usually impact your contentment: increase it or decrease it? Why?
    • What do you find tends to cause you an out-of-the-blue sense of "I need this!"?
    • Anything else on your heart!


    TMI-Link-Up2
    a Rafflecopter giveaway