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Tag Archives: Courtnee White

Finding Strong Priorities Under the Clutter

7 / 9 / 187 / 9 / 18

 

I tend to think in metaphors and analogies.  This spring, my life felt like a river. A smooth rolling river with shady spots created by tree roots and rock formations along the waterway.  An idea or intention that I wanted to act upon would fall into my river and linger in the shady spot, protected by the rocks and tree roots, lingering in a temporary timelessness.  

The ongoing responsibilities of life rushed for my attention–meal planning, homeschooling, cooking, cleaning, reading to the kids, laundry, family time, church and ministry commitments.  But for a few weeks, I would keep seeing the same “leaf” floating in my river. A leaf such as “send a baby shower gift” or “read about that parenting issue that keeps coming up”.

With all my heart, I would want to find the time and energy to accomplish that special task that was above and beyond the daily grind.  

Sometimes it was an opportunity to invest in a relationship through an act of kindness.  But before I knew it, the opportunity had passed. I missed it.

Other times it was a task to accomplish that now felt unfeasible because new tasks were lining up behind it.  The leaf would break free and float on. The priority would float out of my mind because something new needed the space.  

I guess there is a fluidity to some of my priorities.  Opportunities that float in and out of my life. I need to have the margin to act upon them.  

There has been one BIG LEAF lying in my river for a while and it represented a huge project in my house that I wanted to undertake.  I wanted to purge and declutter the house and I just couldn’t seem to make any progress in the weekly pockets of time.

But my husband and I were able to work on it together for 5 days while the kids were with the grandparents and I want to share a little of what I learned from the process and how it is helping me zero in on strong priorities.  

Why do you want to declutter?  In The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo, I was challenged to know why I was tidying up the house.  What did I hope this would accomplish? What did I want my home and life to be like at the end of this project?  Or as leadership guru Stephen Covey famously said, “Begin With the End In Mind.”

For me, I wanted to be less stressed by the amount of stuff in our house and I wanted to simplify the workload of tidying and cleaning so that I could enjoy my family more.  

I wanted it to be easier to find and put away the items we store in our basement.  And atmosphere is really important to me, so I also wanted our home to have a more peaceful, welcoming atmosphere both for us and visitors.

The definition of minimalism.  Minimalism is the term being used in a wide variety of ways to  describe what many of us mean when we say we want to “purge” or “declutter” our houses.  In his book The More of Less: Finding the Life You Want Under Everything You Own, Joshua Becker clarifies that minimalism does not mean a scarce, stark, modern style home with uncomfortable furnishings and nothing lovely.  Leave that form of minimalism to certain forms of architecture and interior design. Becker definines minimalism as “the intentional promotion of the things we most value and the removal of anything that distracts us from them” (p. 18, The More of Less).

That’s what I want.  I want to promote the priorities that really matter to me.  I want to have strong priorities. I want to accomplish the things that really matter to me and let go of things that are distracting me or getting in my way.  

But how will I know what I should get rid of?  My mind would always go to the hardest categories–my books, my hobby/craft items and my sentimental items.   

It’s a heuristic (learn-as-you-go) process.  Becker emphasizes that the process of minimizing will help you discover your own personal version of minimalism based on your dreams, passions and purposes, which often lie buried underneath the possessions we are busy managing.  

Similar to Kondo, Becker explains that knowing why you want to minimize will help you make decisions about what to keep and what to discard.  And the process of minimizing will help clarify what your true priorities are and how you can elevate them.

For me, I was able to let go of a lot of hobby/craft items because during the past year God keeps affirming that He made me to be a writer.  I want to find more time to write, not do certain hobbies and crafts. I chose to keep the tools needed for these hobbies so that when the time is right, I can pick them again.

I got rid of a lot of fabric, but I kept my sewing machine and clarified why I was keeping it.  I want to continue to learn to do basic sewing projects like the burp cloths and lovey blankets my sister taught me how to make the year I got my sewing machine.  I absolutely love giving homemade gifts. Several people have had babies in the past two years and didn’t receive a homemade lovey blanket or burp cloth from me.

And my 7-year-old daughter has asked me to teach her to sew several times!  Although I don’t feel like a sewing whiz, she would eat up the time working on a project together.  This is a priority that’s been buried in my basement. I want to strengthen it and give it my time and attention.     

I got rid of some expectations by purging my DIY decorating supplies.  I realized I was holding on to these items without any plan to use them in the near future.  
During other decluttering sessions, I would always see the value in them (financially and creatively) and continue to hold on to them.  

Going through this purging process reminded me that a few years ago, I actually resented my young children for keeping me from accomplishing creative DIY projects.  

I thought my role as a mom was robbing me of accomplishing these things.  But it’s the other way around. These items and the expectation to be a creative and thrifty home decorator and organizer have been robbing me of focusing on the strong priority of loving the little years with my kids.  Years of cuteness and wonder that will quickly drift into big kid and teen years.

The craft stores and garage sales will be there for me when I actually do need to do a DIY project again.  But for now, I was excited to clear out some physical space in my basement and a lot of mental space in my mind.

Don’t stress over where it goes.  I wanted to get rid of a lot of items in a short amount of time because our church was having a garage sale as a fundraiser.  I was excited that my week of purging lined up with the sale and I could donate so many useful items to raise money for the building project.  

When my husband and his friend loaded up a trailer and two large vehicles to take to the church sale, it was actually raining cats and dogs.  We were hours away from the deadline for getting stuff to the sale so we couldn’t wait.

My heart sank with discouragement.  Would things get so damaged that they would not sell?  Would our items need to be hauled away to dumpster after the sale?  I sent all our old rags to dry stuff off as it was carried inside.

When my husband got home from the water soaked haul, he made the joke that God was crying with me as I saw all my stuff being hauled away.  I adamantly said, “No,” because I had already talked to God about it and sensed a very different symbolism from the rain.  

“It’s just stuff,” I heard God whisper. “And you are not responsible for what happens to it now.  You can’t control if it finds use or finds its way to a landfill.”  

God was showing me that He is far more in control than I am as the rain poured down on all that stuff.  I’m not in control of it. And it’s just stuff. It’s going to rot, decay or burn some day in some way. It’s not going to last forever.    

The process of getting rid of so much stuff has helped me to begin thinking twice before I buy something.  From the smallest consumable item to larger purchases. Even if I enjoy using something for a long time, it’s going to end up in a landfill one day.  Do I really want to invest my time and energy filling landfills? I’ve started asking myself new questions. And I’m realizing this desire to declutter is taking me down new paths of self-discovery.    

My first trip to Target after the purge proved to be a good test.  Every aisle end cap was full of clearance items that seemed too good to pass up.  A funny pillowcase. (Wait. Although we will soon need plain pillowcases, we have enough silly kids’ pillowcases.)  A cute shower curtain. (Ours is just fine, I’m not planning to redecorate the bathroom.) Cotton balls. (Naw. I’m a “fold-up-a-tissue” kind of girl.)  

Then it dawned on me, God, you are testing me?  You want me to know if I am really committed to living differently, to not just decluttering but de-owning–choosing to purchase less.  

Well, game on.  Let’s get out of this store without a receipt and the light-hearted freedom that comes from knowing I was looking for one item, Target didn’t have it, and I left without buying anything else.  Mission accomplished.  

Fewer pillowcases to wash, fold and store.  No shower curtain to start an unnecessary redecorating project.  No cotton balls to lose track of in my closet. More time and resources to make memories with hubby and my kiddos.  Because she won’t be asking me to teach her to sew forever.    

~Courtnee

Soaking in the Truth

Scripture to encourage you:

Matthew 6:19-21 (New Living Translation) “Don’t store up treasures here on earth, where moths eat them and rust destroys them, and where thieves break in and steal. Store your treasures in heaven, where moths and rust cannot destroy, and thieves do not break in and steal. Wherever your treasure is, there the desires of your heart will also be.”

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Music to Inspire:

Since most everyone would say family is one of their top priorities, I couldn’t help but include a few songs that remind me to keep my family as a strong priority.  

Country music disclaimer: Whatever you think of country music, you have to admit, it can cut straight to the heart of what life is all about.  

“You’re Gonna Miss This” by Trace Adkins

“Don’t Blink” by Kenney Chesney

“Where the Green Grass Grows” by Tim McGraw

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Reading and Resources:

I highly recommend Joshua Becker’s book The More of Less: Finding the Life You Want Under Everything You Own as well as his weekly blog posts from Becoming Minimalist.  Most of the recent blog posts I read were by guest writers and I was introduced to a whole subculture of people who are thinking and writing about living a simpler life and how it is impacting their true priorities.

This blog post The Four Monkeys of Materialism  helped me identify traps that lead to accumulating more than I need and having a hard time letting go of what I already have.

This blog post Not So Simple Living helped me think about the MORE that I want to take hold of in my own life with my husband and children.   Rachelle Crawford blogs about how to apply minimalism principles to mom life at Abundant Life With Less.  

Clutter Free with Kids by Joshua Becker is also a great read, but everyone who writes about minimalism emphasizes to start with your own stuff first.

The Minimalist Home by Joshua Becker comes out December 2018.  Becker has avoided giving people detailed advice on what to minimize because it is so personal to how God has gifted and called each person to live out their priorities.  In The Minimalist Home, Becker “both offers practical guidelines for simplifying our lifestyle at home and addresses underlying issues that contribute to over-accumulation in the first place. The purpose is not just to create a more inviting living space. It’s also to turn our life’s HQ–our home–into a launching pad for a more fulfilling and productive life in the world.”   

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Redeeming Angry Moments

4 / 29 / 184 / 30 / 18

Laura
Laura

Yesterday was a no good, very bad, horrible, awful day of parenting for me and I’m feeling guilty and discouraged. ?

Laura
Courtnee

Oh sister, that’s three or four days in my week.  I am so afraid of messing my kids up that I joke about having a savings account for when they need counseling.  Spill it.

Laura
Laura

It was so bad I just hauled off and screamed at my boys.  I put them all in their rooms until I could calm down. That was a good choice at least.  But I don’t like this person who comes out of my mouth when I’m feeling this way.

Laura
Courtnee

I’m with you.  It is SO DIFFICULT to think of productive words when the fuse gets lit and you need to do something to end the craziness that lit the fuse.  

Laura
Laura

I say things like “You’re driving me crazy” or “You never listen to me!”  Writing this now makes me realize a lot of what I say when I’m feeling so angry is about me…

Laura
Courtnee

Wow, interesting observation. What ignited the fuse yesterday?

Laura
Laura

They were just being wild.  I asked them to stop and they didn’t.  And it irked me. I think it’s a combination of my need for control or calm and my concern that the wild behavior will lead to someone getting hurt.  

Laura
Courtnee

I seriously cannot think straight when my kids are loud, rambunctious and all talking (or whining) at once.  ?

Laura
Laura

I also plain don’t like it when I have clearly asked them to do something and they don’t respond.  Not even, “in a minute mommy;” I’m talking they just continue playing as if I didn’t speak! But after I yell at them I wonder if I’ve harmed their little hearts by shouting at them like that? I feel so guilty.

Laura
Courtnee

Oh no, not guilt for lunch again.  You described my house exactly. I am wired for guilt: a perfectionist who gets angry with her kids when they push the limits and cross my boundaries.

Laura
Laura

Yes… boundaries crossed.  Fuse lit. Can’t think straight to set clear and reasonable or age appropriate consequences. Yelling. Sad kids. Guilty Mama…

Laura
Courtnee

Ditto… You think there is a better way?

Laura
Laura

I hope so because my anger does not bring us closer and it obviously doesn’t change their behavior and I don’t even feel good about it afterward, so something needs to go!  It doesn’t help us stay strong and connected as a family either.

Laura
Courtnee

What could you try differently?

Laura
Laura

Great question.  Maybe being able to identify what makes me so angry might help me get a handle on the anger before I lose it.  Then I can know what to do or say before I’m bubbling over with anger. Because what am I teaching them when I let their actions control my emotions?  That it’s ok for them to lose control of theirs?

Laura
Courtnee

Gulp.  I have caught myself disciplining my kids for doing things they have observed me doing.  I want to push pause in those moments and have the time to grow and change, but life keeps going and I have to deal with my imperfect parenting while they keep observing it.

Laura
Laura

I totally get that.  I’m imperfect, they’re imperfect.  And yet we have been put together by God as a family.  When we mess up, we need to rely on something bigger than our imperfections to build us back up and make us a stronger family unit.

Laura
Courtnee

Put together.  For a purpose. To glorify God.  He’s not expecting perfection from us.  He wants to help us to be stronger… together. Good stuff.

Laura
Laura

If I let the anger and guilt fester, it’s never going to change. But if I can remember the goal is mended relationships, then I can practice #strongforgiveness.

I’m not saying I don’t need to work on why I got angry… I do, but that’s going to take time. So in the meantime, what do I do after a blowup?

Laura
Courtnee

Ask for forgiveness. Sometimes it’s easier than other times. Either way you and your kids are experiencing real life and real forgiveness together.

Laura
Laura

That is the best way to redeem our angry moments.  Receive what we don’t deserve… from the ones we love the most.

Laura
Courtnee

I forget that God gives me a blank slate every morning.  He is not counting yesterday against me. Only I do that.

Laura
Laura

Right.

Laura
Courtnee

And we are NOT going to give up on this parenting journey because we know how valuable it is to us, to our kids and to the glory of God to let His strong forgiveness redeem the guilt and anger. #bemomstrong

Laura
Laura

Oh, what a way to make the no good, very bad, terrible moments slip away into the forgotten past!

Laura
Courtnee

Tea parties, popcorn and ice cream help at our house, too!

Laura
Laura

Can I come?

Laura
Courtnee

Please do!

Soaking in the Truth

Scripture to encourage you:

  • “Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.  I say to myself, ‘The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for him.’” (Lamentations 3:22-24, NIV)
  • “My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires” (James 1:19-20, NIV).
  • “Everyone enjoys a fitting reply; it is wonderful to say the right thing at the right time!” (Proverb 15:23, NLT)
  • “An angry person stirs up conflict, and a hot-tempered person commits many sins.” (Proverbs 29:22, NIV)
  • “‘In your anger do not sin’: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry, and do not give the devil a foothold.” (Ephesians 4:26, NIV)

Music to inspire you:

  • Be Thou My Vision
  • Fear is a Liar By Zach Williams
  • Even If By MercyMe

Readings and Resources to come alongside of you:

  • Boundaries with Kids by Henry Cloud and John Townsend
  • Triggers by Amber Lia and Wendy Speake I (Laura) have just started reading this book and I find it very very helpful so far.  It’s making me think about what makes me angry and why and then I can work on my own heart first. I’m hoping that I’ll be able to be a more patient example to my kids of how to manage my emotions.
  • Podcast (Part 1 of 2) by the authors of Triggers.
  • Part 2 of Podcast by the authors of Triggers.
  • I (Courtnee) took a long look at how anger plays out in my life by participating in a small group with Celebrate Recovery.  It was an amazing season of God growing and changing me through a safe, confidential community of women who were also being honest and vulnerable about issues in their lives.  We grew very close. I still talk and pray with one of the friends I made. Celebrate Recovery is a “large umbrella” 12 Step program to help a limitless number of issues. It is a biblical and balanced program effective in helping people overcome their hurts, hang-ups and habits.
  • Wise Words for Moms Chart: A calendar shaped chart that helps you prayerfully address your children’s behavior with wisdom from Scripture, good questions and possible consequences that fit the behavior.
  • Short Video: Falling Plates:  A creative video contemplating our relationship with God who can restore and redeem all our mistakes.

Related Posts on Texting The Truth:

  • Real Security, Real Strength
  • How the F-Word Broke My Heart
  • When Mom Needs a Time Out

Living Out the Truth

Ideas to try:

  • A prayer for wisdom.  Dear Jesus, please empower us to seek you in our worst moments of mothering when we feel gross and ugly and we have no idea how to parent our kids.  Protect us from falling into despair. Heavenly Father, please lead us gently to the next step. You know how we want to have it all figured out and under control and we get paralyzed.  Help us trust you to lead us to the next step, like a mountain climber carefully choosing his footholds one at a time. Help us wait and help us choose. Please light our paths. And we trust You that even through our imperfect parenting you are raising up these children to be the Jesus-loving men and women you have created them to be.    In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
  • A prayer for change.  Heavenly Father, please show me how to do life differently.  I don’t want to parent from anger or with anger any longer. Lead me to the relationships and resources that will specifically help me develop new tools and pathways for handling my kids when they anger me.  Help me to hide your Word in my heart so that I am ready with gentle answers, wise words and self control. Thank you that as I submit to you day by day, you are making me into the mom you uniquely designed me to be.  In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
  • Try keeping an anger journal.  One where you write what made you angry and exactly how you felt.  Then over time, you can figure out what makes you the most angry. Or maybe even if there is a certain time of day (or time of the month), so that you can try to do things differently during those times.
  • If you know things need to change, find a friend and ask them to read one of the books listed above together or just be a prayer and accountability partner.

{These suggestions are ideas from novice moms. Sometimes our life situations need more. In that case, seeking out professional help is the right call.}

 

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