11.23.2010

Patching up the Family

During the holiday season, we all could use a few reminders of how to better get along with family. Living, Loving and Leaving (your differences at the door) to make the most of precious time together. Here is an article from Real Simple magazine that I think is worth your time.
Wrestling with my oldest brother camping this summer and hugging it a few days later,some things never change...
 BUT some do, as my other brother has blessed me with the pleasure of Aunty-hood and thus changed our relationship forever as I will always be there for him and my Godson!
LOVE YOU BROTHERS!


10 Ways to Be Closer to Your Siblings
Dealing with your sister and brother can be a little complicated. A family relationship expert explains how to tighten your bond.
By Jane Isay

Everyone expects children to squabble. Remember the DEFCON 1–level tantrum you threw when your younger sister gave Barbie a Grace Jones flattop? But as we grow up, most of us hope to achieve détente or, better yet, a meaningful connection with our sisters and brothers. Unfortunately, that’s not always easy. In researching my second book on family dynamics, I interviewed nearly 100 men and women about how they got along with their siblings and found that most people wanted those relationships to improve—whether they were already pretty close or barely spoke. The trouble was, they didn’t know how to make it happen. Here are ten suggestions on how to forge a more perfect union.

1. Childhood is like Vegas: Let what happened there stay there. Don’t guilt yourself over the mind games you played on your brother, and stop accusing your sister of stealing the sweater you bought in Florence, circa 1992. Make a conscious effort to forgive these childhood misdeeds and they’ll soon be water under the Ponte Vecchio.

2. Make a cameo apperance. Sure you’re going to show up at the obligatory, with a capital O, events: weddings, graduations, and Thanksgiving dinner. That’s part of being a family. But showing up unexpectedly at your brother’s 5K run? Or at the family taco night held by your sister’s Spanish club? Now, that means something.


3. Stop being the family mole. Ever-shifting alliances, surreptitious confabs, stealth reconnaissance—you’d think we were talking about The Bourne Identityand not those other people born to your mother. Sibling relationships are often defined by behind-the-back gossiping, whether that means secretly slamming one sib to the other or listening greedily as your parents decry your brother’s latest over-the-top electronics purchase. As expected, all this duplicitous chatter erodes honesty and makes it nearly impossible for you to be as close-knit with your clan as you would like. So cut it out. And if you’re finding it difficult to tear yourself away from, say, Mom’s gripe-fest, remember that she most likely lets loose about you, too.


4. Mind your manners. Would you ever ask a friend, “Have you brushed your teeth this week?” No? Then don’t speak to your brother like that. You don’t have to be formal with siblings, but a petty comment still rankles, no matter how close you are to them. The brothers and sisters whom I spoke to say digs about weight, grammar usage, and your sib’s choice of friends are especially off-limits.


5. Fight typecasting. Growing up, you may have been pegged by your family with a certain role: the responsible one, the loose cannon, the baby. And no matter how much you blossom as an adult, this role sticks. While many men and women credit happy relationships with their immediate kin to this immutability—the comfort of knowing what’s expected of them—others find it stifling. If you’re in that latter group (and think your sibs may be as well), try this: At the next family dinner, tout the fact that your brother, the brain, climbed Mount Rainier or that your sister, the jock, is writing a book. By acknowledging the way that your siblings have evolved from their childhood roles, you implicitly give everyone the green light to see you differently as well—not just as the mercurial one who once threw a plate of peas at Nana Gladys.


6. B gr8 txt frnds. Occasional hours-long chats are nice, but you’re actually more likely to supercharge your bond by having frequent casual contact, many sibs say. Technology can help. Text messaging from a train platform, commenting on a Facebook update, and pinging on your BlackBerry make it really easy to be the thoughtful sister you are.


7. Quit being jealous of other people's sibling relationships. Maybe your best friend and her sister routinely send each other homemade cookies. Or your husband and his "Let’s have a group hug!" siblings make the Waltons look like the McCoys. When you witness others sharing tight ties with their brethren, it can be easy to devalue your own relationship—if, say, exchanging birthday cards constitutes meaningful contact between you and your sister. Remember, though, that there are different depths to each bond and that somewhere inside that group hug, someone is usually dropping an elbow.


8. Play nice with your brother's (not so nice) spouse. By doing so, you’ll send the message that this woman—despite her honking voice and inability to bring so much as Lipton soup dip to the family potluck—deserves a chance. And to your brother this will prove your loyalty and acceptance. If they break up, it will be an even greater sign of your devotion if you don’t tell him, "I was faking it the whole time." Men don’t like to know about women faking anything, it seems.


9. Get out of the Dodge. Back in the day, a family vacation meant dividing the backseat with masking tape. Now a trip with the sibs means choosing your own destination and, thank God, travel arrangements. Wherever you go, skip the spa (bonding is unlikely when you’re swaddled in banana leaves) and try to eat at least two meals together.


10. Avoid hot-button topics (politics, religious, high-fructose corn syrup). It sounds like common sense, but too many of us don’t follow it and find ourselves at dinner making scorched-earth pronouncements. So if you’re not on the same wavelength as your teapartying brother or, conversely, your Nancy Pelosi–loving sister, it’s smart just to steer clear of mentioning Washington, D.C.

11.21.2010

Living Today

I recently attended the Women of Faith conference in Sacramento and heard many beautiful things about the power of God. I was most inspired by Luci Swindoll and her crazy love for adventure and her burning desire to live in the moment, praising God for the very blessings we have each day.

Taking from that, my roommate and fellow sister in Christ have decided to take a great leap and start LIVING! We're going to run a half marathon just after the New Years and the training has begun! We're already reaping the benefits of our training by using our runs as ways to get to know the city better. 
Today was a 4 mile run on the Golden Gate bridge and around the base of the Presidio. A few days ago it was a 3 mile run through Golden Gate Park. The excitement of where our short outings will take us are endless and promising as ways for God to reveal the beauty and need in the city of San Francisco, our new home!
Praise God for he is loves and let's us enjoy so much, we just have to be willing to get out and do it.


"We have no idea what lies ahead or how God will open doors of potentiality when we consciously choose to get out of the ruts we're in and start moving down new paths about which we can be excited--even passionate." 

11.19.2010

Winter warmth within...

There is always an abundance of Christmas and holiday decor & expectations thrown at us during November & December. 
Be careful to keep a comfortable feel in the midst of the months of madness. 
Here are few touches to help you feel thoughtful and snuggly this winter.

Christmas cards by Two Brunettes:
Be personal with your holiday greetings



accents from Crate&Barrel:
 adorable bird ornaments make great gift toppers


beautiful art that is a perfect choice for changing up your walls this season


holiday cookies from Sugar Sugar:
No need for extravagance- simple sugar cookies should be part of everyone's holiday baking day or order to send afar



a peaceful picture- perfect for that wintery-touch in the city office

 

Pottery Barn hand knit stockings:
bring comfort to tradition with these on your mantel


Rosebank Creations frame ideas:
Creative way to Christmas-ize frames around the house


Christmas-Country decorations:
Crafty country aspects can really bring warmth to a city home 



and don't forget to display a scene and remember 
what Christmas is all about...


11.03.2010

Help to heal the hurting

Today is a new day, a beautiful one in fact. Even on days such as this one, I am in a struggle I have been in the process of trying to move forward from for nearly 8 months. 
One of the greatest struggles we face, because I know I am not the only one out there battling a heart break, is the constant battle to see the positive in the promise of a healed heart in our future, as opposed to focusing on the negative which is our pain in the current moment.
 I believe in inspiration from those already in a phase of healing we strive to be in, the faith that God is good and through our struggles he promises to reveal this suffering as part of his greater plan for each of us, and also to accept that it truly is our moments of weakness and pain that make those of peace and calm that much more appreciated and savored. 
Here are a few things I have put together to express myself through hope. 


"There came a time when the risk to remain tight in the bud was more painful than the risk to blossom."
-Anais Nin


"I tell you the truth, if anyone says to this mountain, `Go, throw yourself into the sea,' and does not doubt in his heart but believes that what he says will happen, it will be done for him. 24) Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours. 25) And when you stand praying, if you hold anything against anyone, forgive him, so that your Father in heaven may forgive you your sins."
-- Mark 11: 23-25





"Don't make someone your priority that is only making you an option."


"I want to be remembered as the girl who always smiles even when her heart is broken, and the one that could always brighten up your day even if she couldn't brighten her own."


"And our hope of you is stedfast, knowing, that as ye are partakers of the sufferings, so shall ye be also of the consolation."
--2 Corinthians 1:7


Everything happens for a reason...
"There were reasons we met, reasons for the good times and reasons for the bad times, and most importantly a reason to end. We have more to learn, more to experience and more loving to do in this lifetime."


"There is peace and comfort in sorrow."
"Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards."
"The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays."
-all from Soren Kieregaard

When you forgive, you in no way change the past – but you sure do change the future.
- Bernard Meltzer



Continue to heal through pray, keeping calm and carrying on, and granting yourself the time to heal for it is a process of growth and change.