What The Ultrasound Didn’t Show

I have been working on a very different post, about how I’ve transitioning from one eating plan to a different one and why and how it’s going. But this morning, a Facebook memory popped up from 5 years ago, and it changed my direction. The other post can wait a few days.

Baby shower

Five years ago this morning, I was wrapped in pure joy. I was freshly turned 41, very pregnant with my longed-for rainbow baby, and honored with a lovely, overwhelmingly generous baby shower by my home church, surrounded by supportive women, some of whom had known me since I was 2 years old. Glorious. (And that’s my sweet, excited mama by my side).

Today, exactly five years later, I got up early on this holiday weekend morning, threw on the first available pair of shorts and a t-shirt, ran a brush through my dirty hair, and left the house with a notebook, an iPad, and a grim determination to get some desperately needed alone time. I was supposed to be having it in my jammies at home, leisurely flipping through magazines and listening to the birds. Instead, my daughter threw a colossal tantrum, my husband had to rearrange the special plans he’d made for an outing with her, and my choice was to feel grounded at home myself or “run away” before my alone-time, sanity-preserving window closed. With my husband’s blessing, I ran.

Did I go off to a salon and decompress with my toes in swirling bubbles? Go on a shopping spree? Sip coffee in a hip, comfy coffeehouse chair? Nope. Inconveniently, we have recently set out on a journey to be debt-free, and my “blow money” budget was already spent up for this month. So in the interest of fiscal responsibility, I drove to the parking lot of a closed business to borrow their wi-fi so I could watch a video from a parenting series literally titled “Have a Different Child By Friday.”

I really couldn’t have anticipated this at that shower. We knew so many things before her birth – we’d seen her face and her gender and the chambers of her heart from her ultrasound, we tracked her development size week by week relative to various fruits and vegetables thanks to a prenatal app, we’d even chosen her name years before. But with any pregnancy there is no way to know ahead of time the one thing that would actually truly be useful information: their personality.

You can’t possibly know what will make them laugh and what will make them dig in their heels. What they’ll absorb easily and what will be hard for them to understand. And most importantly – you can’t know how very much your own strengths and so-human flaws will be reflected in their little life. I shared about this a bit before I went back to work from maternity leave (you can read that post here), but at 11 weeks old, she still wasn’t offering up a real glimpse of who she might be.

My daughter is bright, funny, and gives the best hugs and kisses. She is extraordinarily observant and loves art and books and our kitty and dresses and glitter. And she has what I have to believe is actually a 2-child’s-worth dose of stubbornness and a highly charged sense of outrage when challenge is presented to her own ideas,  which she might possibly have gotten from me and then amplified it. She will set the world on fire one day, and I pray over her daily that she will allow that strength to be used as a mighty woman of God as she grows up.

Really though, the biggest thing I didn’t know at that shower five years ago was that I’d be challenged to grow up myself. I’d spent over four decades learning myself, just to be beautifully, and possibly humorously from God’s perspective, reminded that in no way do I know it all, can do it all, or can control it all. When I’m stressed out and wonder if I’m doing any of this right, that reminder can feel like a curse. Oh, but it isn’t. It’s a gift.

How much more clearly can I be brought to understand God’s great, infinitely gracious, patient love for me (and for those around me whose deservedness of grace I may be tempted to measure) than to be called on to show that grace, patience, and guidance to my daughter? Today is just a day. There will be so many more; more opportunities for laughter and strength and remembering that the loudest lesson I teach is my own actions. Of course I feel inadequate to the task. I am! But He isn’t, and I can trust Him, with her and with myself. Thank you Lord.

“For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:11

5 Things I Wish I’d Learned Before The Wedding

This week, J and I celebrated our 13th wedding anniversary. As sometimes happens, we hardly saw each other on the actual day, but we managed to escape for a quick getaway a couple of days later. We actually ended up at the scene of our first (blind) date. Well, sort of. We were at a restaurant across the street, since the site of our actual first dinner has since been torn down and replaced with a very large Sun Tan City.

That really struck me as humorous, although it might not have a year or two ago. Much like the wrecking ball and construction site mess that transforms the old building into the new, the rosy romantic love of the wedding day can easily be pressed, stretched, and reformed through the years into something that barely resembles the original. This is, sadly, the end of many a marriage. It nearly was for ours, but by the grace of God, it wasn’t.

On Christmas Eve, 2016, after one of the most heart wrenching arguments we’d had, I tearfully told my husband I wanted out. Out of the turmoil, out of the strain and unhappiness, out of the seemingly endless cycle of trying to fix things and failing. We’d gone to counseling, we’d gone through the exercises, but we just couldn’t seem to find peace. For the past 2 years, we’d been through a hurricane of job loss, medical issues, financial strain, postpartum depression, and so much anger. I was worn out.

I’d never wanted to end up divorced. Both sets of our parents are celebrating their 50th anniversaries this year – our grandparents were separated only by death. We did not come from a background of calling it quits, but there just did not seem to be an end in sight. I was distraught at the idea of what we might be doing to our then toddler, I was struggling in every area of my life, and I felt terribly, terribly alone.

My words seemed to hang in the air, and then J gave his answer. With tears of his own, he told me he just wanted me to be happy, and if he needed to leave for that to happen, he would. I had an open door to end it between us, but when I opened my mouth to say it, my heart spoke something else instead. I realized that if I truly believed the vows we had made before God had been heard and accepted by Him, this marriage could be saved. I want to say here, carefully, that I am aware that there are some marriages that cannot be salvaged. There are times when, due to risk of personal safety or abandonment or other deeply painful circumstances, reconciliation isn’t possible or advisable. But those were not our issues.

Our problems were mostly unmet expectations with a heavy dose of poor communication, lack of compassion, and, as much as it pains me to say, lack of trusting God. While I had, many times, gone through the litany of our problems in my head, I finally realized in that one moment that they all boiled down to the last one: I had stopped trusting God with my marriage. When J offered to leave to make me happy, I finally saw his heart. He did love me, even if it wasn’t the candlelight and roses variety. He valued my happiness, my well-being more than his own. When was the last time I’d done that for him?

So my answer to him was that I didn’t want to leave. I wanted to have a lifelong marriage. I wanted to have and to be a partner with a shared purpose in life. I wanted to be part of something bigger than just an amalgamation of bills and to do lists and home repairs. For the first time, I truly understood that my husband was not my enemy.

We didn’t fix everything overnight, but with our priorities finally aligned, healing began to flow. There is peace in our home. When we do argue, we resolve it quickly, without emotional damage to one another. We set in motion a series of goals to achieve together that are transforming our lives in every way.

There is a book in our house that we call theMarriage book Marriage Book. My mother gave it to me as a bridal journal when I got engaged, but since my planning binder dominated that time, I didn’t actually use it. On our first anniversary, I wrote a letter to J in it, and he wrote one to me. This became our annual tradition. The letters are part recap of our year, part romantic mushiness, and part hopes for the year to come. There are 2 years worth of blank pages in that book. I regret that, but at the time there were no words we wanted to commit to ink. I had thought perhaps we’d go back and put something down to mark the passing of those years, but now I know we won’t. We have moved forward. The pages are filling up again, and it’s time for me to write another one now. Those empty pages will serve as a memorial to what we did wrong but also, and far more importantly, to forgiveness and to mistakes we no longer make.

I have several sweet friends getting married this year. I’m happy for them; excited by their excitement. It brings back memories of butterflies and anticipation and joy. But it also gives me a lot to think about. We sailed into our wedding, as many do, sincere in our love for each other, but pretty unprepared for our lifetime together. So here is what I’m thankful to know now, but wish I had known (or lived out better) then.

1) Pray for your husband, every single day. Not “God please make him ______” but for blessings over him, his wellbeing, favor in his work, thankfulness for him. You cannot sustain destructive anger towards someone today when you know you’ll be asking God to bless him again tomorrow morning! And oh yes, God hears those prayers.

2) Talk about money. Be honest, open, and direct. This is not an area for assumptions. Use a budgeting tool (we useĀ You Need A Budget*, but even paper and pencil can work), set your giving, saving, and spending goals together, and work your plan. And my personal opinion is to share joint accounts. I know couples who don’t, but I think there’s tremendous value in seeing the money and its administration as “ours” instead of “mine over here and yours over there.”

3) Learn to fight fair. Use “I feel” statements instead of “You always” or “You never”. Rarely are either of those true, and they just add fuel to your own fire. Remember that this man you are angry with is your partner for life, and is just as valuable to God as you are. Speak your heart, but do it with peace as the goal, rather than your personal rightness. This may require some deep, calming breaths and a dose of prayer before you speak. I promise you won’t regret that.

4) Do not withhold forgiveness from your husband. If he comes to you with a sincere apology, accept it. Without an “ok, but….”. You are his safe place and he is yours, but it won’t feel that way at all if he’s always wondering if you’ll throw his past mistakes in his face the next time you’re angry. If you consistently practice #3 above, this one is much easier to do.

5) Celebrate your differences. We rarely marry carbon copies of ourselves! We are gifted differently to complement one another. His lack of thinking as you do is not a weakness on his part, much as it might annoy you in the moment. And I’ll add this here, although it probably deserves its own entry: You are not always right. His way of doing things isn’t inherently wrong just because it’s different from how you prefer it to be done. The end goal is far more important than the method.

I could probably expand this list by a dozen more items, but these are at the top. I hope if you are married that there is laughter and joy between you and your husband. I hope you haven’t experienced the turmoil we went through. But most of all, I hope that our story (shared here with J’s agreement) can be used for good; that someone who reads this one day finds hope and a promise of a future they feared had been ruined.
Wedding to now

*All YNAB users are given a referral link to share. You are under no obligation to use it, but if you do and you decide to sign up past the free trial, you’ll get an additional month free and so will I.

Too Much of a Good Thing

This week has… not been so great. I’ve been over-committed and exhausted, and the worst part is, it’s all of my own doing! I’m generally pretty good at saying no to outside commitments, but it turns out, I can’t seem to say it to myself.

I’ve been giving this quite a bit of thought, and I think the cause of it is I’ve allowed my goals to get out of sync with my priorities. This is a bit embarrassing to admit – in my previous career, I was a corporate trainer who got paid to teach people how to set goals properly! So how is it still sometimes so difficult?

This past year has been a pretty unprecedented season of personal change for me. I’ve lost a significant amount of weight, which itself came after a time of some pretty deep emotional issues. I’ve craved simplicity like it was chocolate, and I’ve purged and organized all the closets and cabinets I can get my hands on. We’ve taken on a major financial project with the goal of being debt free, and while that’s just starting, I’ve been trying to keep my spending as limited as possible. So when the weightloss sparked several dropped clothing sizes, I’ve spent countless hours sorting old clothes, some to donate and some to sell (which takes way more steaming/steaming/photographing/listing time than I imagined!). Oh, and I changed roles again at my job a little over a year ago, and due to the nature of the work, much of it is still new to me.

So I find myself surrounded in self-improvement projects, and although I have more physical energy, my mental energy has drained rapidly the past few weeks. The mess of clothes in the guest room makes me twitch (oh, and we just went through our semi-annual kid’s consignment sorting and tagging extravaganza with Peapod’s stuff). I have blog ideas pinging around my brain but it takes time to document some of my projects with my camera as I’m working through them. I am trying to learn Instagram and other tools to build a cohesive media presence that might one day create a second income stream for my family. My husband’s schedule has gone out of sync with mine so preschool pickups are complicated and I can’t always get to my workout classes. And, the most frustrating thing of all is my weightloss has started to stall out!Busy mind

Is it possible to take on too much of good things? Heck yeah! What’s too much? Who knows! But here’s what I do know: when it all starts to go sideways, the only place to go is back to the basics. My time with God has to come back to the top of my daily to do list. Next are my family’s care and my physical well-being. I’m not entirely sure why I’m struggling so much lately to track and follow my eating plan, but it’s the only thing that works. I have had great success, but I’m nowhere near my final goal, and I don’t want to give up now! If I’m real honest, it’s only partly fatigue from doing this for so many months and more so the stress of my life whispering to me that food will take the edge off. It’s time to remember that I’m doing this to improve my life to be able to better deal with stress! As for the rest… I need to slow my roll.

That’s where the prioritizing gets a little tougher, I think. With my discarded clothes, I have felt like it was the fiscally responsible thing to try to get some of the value back to put towards other purchases. And that’s not a bad thing, but in my case, it may not be that good of a thing either. The key to that decision is, what is the opportunity cost to my time? It’s possible its time to let practicality trump dollars, donate them to a good cause, and enjoy the room to breathe.

With my blog writing and organizing projects and thoughts and how-tos…. it’s easy to get lost in analysis of what would get more views, widen my exposure, capitalize on a trend. But I believe God gave me the words to write the truth and insights from my life to be useful to someone else. And that’s how I’ll approach it going forward – I want to write my heart. And sometimes that might be how to cut a pineapple and sometimes it might be a meditation on a scripture. I want to connect with people and encourage them, more than I want a certain number of views or likes on Instagram.

Some of you may be the Type A to my Type B, and you may not struggle with this kind of thing at all. That is great! This is no condemnation of self-improvement. It’s just an acknowledgement that at some point in any of our lives, we can “good idea” ourselves right into some not-so-good moments. Let’s pay attention. We only have one life on this earth – let it be something lovely!

Inside Out

I’ve always been some degree of overweight as an adult. To be honest, sometimes it bothered me and sometimes it didn’t. When those degrees notched up a bit I’d try some diet or another, lose maybe 15 pounds and then get bored or overwhelmed and give up. But in 2013, I was catapulted into the most difficult time of my life, and everything took on new shape and form, including myself.

Completely and totally overwhelmed by becoming a new mom at 41, my husband’s job loss, the devastation of our finances, and the stress that accompanied a job change of my own, I turned to food. I was too embarrassed by the turmoil in my life, by my own lack of perfection to reach out for help for a very long time. Over those months I ate my stress, my sorrow, my embarrassment, and my confusion. I knew I was gaining weight but I just didn’t have any emotional resources left to deal with it. I was outraged at how hard my life was and instead of turning to Jesus as I knew to do, I feared what He might show me about my own weaknesses so I gave in to my anger instead and used food to try to numb it. I gained somewhere around 70 pounds in a little more than a year.

Weight is such a complex subject, perhaps especially for women. For me, it was a barrier between my private hell and the world I was sure was judging me; a literal insulation from activities and people around me. It was also a punishment I inflicted on myself for being so angry and having such ugly thoughts.

Once we started doing the hard work of restoring the right order of our lives (a story of grace for another day), I made a decision I hadn’t anticipated. I gave myself permission to stay fat while I dealt with the state of my heart first. I don’t believe there’s a diet plan in the world that would have worked for me until I could forgive myself for my failings. This was a challenging line to walk. I was becoming lighter and freer on the inside and painfully aware my outside did not match. Although no one said anything unkind to me, I imagined a thousand unspoken comments from those around me of, “poor Heidi, if she could just get a grip on her weight.” I did my best to hold my head up and carry on, wanting desperately to shout from the rooftops that these pounds weren’t the real me, that people had no idea of what I’d been through, what I’d almost lost,  what kind of miracles were going on in my spirit and my home. And that I wasn’t undisciplined or out of control as they may have believed.

Finally, last Spring, I knew I was ready to physically take care of myself like I’d been doing emotionally and spiritually. I signed up for Weight Watchers as a 45th birthday present to myself and the pounds started falling off. Eventually, people started to notice, and the compliments started coming. I am thankful for them. They are flattering, and sincere, and appreciated. But sometimes I hear “You look great, you must feel so much better now” and it stops me in my tracks.

They are not wrong. I do, in fact, feel better. I’m stronger, and faster, and lighter. But I can’t help wishing they knew that what makes me feel better is the lightness of heart, the joy, the peace in my home that came before the pounds started to go. That I was ok before I looked like it on the surface. That I was worth complimenting for honoring my marriage vows, for choosing a forgiving spirit, for simply living my life and not giving up. But I can’t ask from people what I haven’t done well myself.

So I think I’m finding my voice now to say this: I was worth it. God says if He cares for even the sparrows my worth is infinitely greater. Who was I to pour hatred over myself and suffocate myself in the walls I thought were shutting everyone else out. And you are worth it too. If you struggle with extra weight, you might choose to lose it, and I will cheer you on.

But first I’ll tell you that you are a priceless treasure. That we are all an amalgamation of strengths and weaknesses, and no one kind is more valuable than the other. I told myself for so long that my capacity to gain weight made me worthless, diminished my value in this world, was a character flaw. I was wrong. The flaws were the destructive attitudes I chose, and as I constantly tell my preschooler, you can choose a new attitude any time. I believe this for me, and I will believe it for you, until you can choose to believe it for yourself.

Blogiversary! Redefining Again…

I started this 6 years ago for a place to basically dump my random thoughts. I was almost 40, struggling with infertility, trying out clean eating, and striving to grow in grace.

Since that day I lost some weight, had a miscarriage, had my beautiful daughter, struggled with undiagnosed post-partum depression, had my family life nearly implode as my husband went through a difficult employment period and dealt with medical issues, saw our finances take a direct hit, did the hardest work of our lives to restore our stressed-to-the-max marriage, changed roles twice at my job and, after quickly losing the baby weight, gained somewhere around 70 stress pounds in about a year.

Tired from reading that? I definitely was, and my eating habits sure didn’t give me any extra energy to deal with it all. I didn’t want to feel the way I did, but I knew I had to deal with my emotions before I could deal with the weight. Bit by bit, with counseling, and fresh honesty, and many prayers, things got better. Or we got better at letting go of what didn’t matter.

Before and AfterOn 5/9/17 I turned 45. I knew I was ready, and I decided to sign up for Weight Watchers. I started on 5/12/17 and set my goal at a healthy weight for my height. I’d been some version of overweight all my life, and I’d always hedged my bets by “just trying to lose 20 pounds and see how I did.” This time, I was all in. And as of 3/18 I’m down about 85 pounds so far.

Many things about my life are still in the process of changing. I’m several sizes smaller, so I’ve had to deal with discarded clothes and new clothes, but since we’re also tackling our finances, I have to be pretty savvy about how I keep my wardrobe updated, and I’ve gotten pretty good at it. We’re working towards being debt free, which is overwhelming and exciting. I’ve completely changed the way I eat (and boy can that be a budget-buster too) and I have some great meal ideas and snack tips. My daughter is now a preschooler, and I’m continually learning how to mom and do it with grace, humor, and again, a budget. And feeling so much better in my skin (and my brain), I want my environment to match, so I’ve been gradually organizing/purging/konmari-ing our house. Got some good ideas there too!

So to get all those ideas out, I’m re(de)fining my content here. You can still read all those old posts under the Archive category, but going forward, my content will mostly fall in these three areas:

  • Simplify: Organization, budget streamlining, time-saving
  • Beautify: Weightloss, fitness, meal planning, possibly even some crafty type things
  • Glorify: I know that everything I do is nothing if it is not grounded in the God who created me, redeemed me, and rescued me. As I seek his face, I’ll share my journey into Grace.

Come along for the ride! You can click the Follow button at the right (or at the bottom on mobile)  to be notified when a new post goes up, and follow me on Instagram to see what I’m into!