The chocolate Easter bunnies are a happy memory. Empty plastic eggs appear to have multiplied and hidden themselves in various corners of my house. The baskets are holding other treasures now, but one of their Easter goodies still retains its luster.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Play it Again, Mom
The chocolate Easter bunnies are a happy memory. Empty plastic eggs appear to have multiplied and hidden themselves in various corners of my house. The baskets are holding other treasures now, but one of their Easter goodies still retains its luster.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Witness to Truth
Today I am participating in "Monday Manna," hosted by Joanne Sher at An Open Book. Visit her blog for links to more discussion on Acts 22:15.
You will be his witnesses to all men of what you have seen and heard. Acts 22:15
The courtroom gallery is silent. The judge adjusts his glasses. The jurors sit in various attitudes of interest. An attorney approaches a lone woman, who has just sworn to tell “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me God.”
“Tell the court what you saw the night of April 18, 2009.”
The witness’s duty is to provide evidence in a trial, to tell her story in her own words before the court. The judge may ask her questions. She may be cross-examined. Above all, the witness’s primary duty is to tell the truth.
God instructed Ananias, a devout observer of Torah and a believer in Jesus the Messiah, to go to a man named Saul of Tarsus and restore his sight. By faith, Ananias delivered God’s mission for Saul--bring His name and His truth before the Gentiles and before the people of Israel. (Acts 9:11-19)
God had chosen Saul, also known as Paul, to be His witness. A witness is more than one who sees what happened; he has to be able and willing to affirm the truth of his testimony.
After his encounter with Jesus, whom Ananias calls “the Righteous One”, Paul was more than willing. He testified to God’s grace, God’s providence, God’s sovereignty, God’s love. He told his story in his own words before more than one court. He was put on trial, cross-examined, accused, and imprisoned.
Paul never wavered in his witness.
Your testimony may not contain the drama of Paul’s, the heartache of Peter’s, or the blessed relief of Mary Magdalene’s. But you are also called to be His witness. Speak the truth. Tell your story. In your own words.
When the Pharisees investigated Jesus’ healing of the blind man at the Pool of Siloam, they grilled him mercilessly. He couldn’t answer all their questions, but he told them the truth: “One thing I do know. I was blind but now I see!” (John 9:25b)
Friday, April 17, 2009
Banana-Bran Muffins
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Negatives
My name is Karen and I’m a perfectionist. I like to think of myself as a recovering perfectionist. Never quite over it, but always learning to laugh at this personal foible.
Perfectionism is a craving. I think “just one more edit” or “one more attempt” and I’ll have it. It’s a form of idolatry. My mind creates an ideal and I think I can achieve it--but it always eludes me, morphing into something slightly different each time I think I’m close. I have trouble letting go of a project. I crave that next attempt at improvement.
It’s a form of pride. Close enough is just not good enough. Others compliment. I question whether they’ve looked closely enough at the subject at hand. I believe I can do better because---well, because it’s me. I can do it.
Like I said, I’m recovering.
I’ve been fortunate in my writing to have some good teachers. One high school English teacher wrote comments on our papers that would probably get her in trouble nowadays for “damaging our self esteem.” On the contrary, she was usually right and we knew it. She chiseled away at my writing until I was forced to uncover the gemstone in the middle of all the dirt and rock.
I’ve learned to take comments in stride--even the negative ones. When I taught workshops on customer service, I occasionally received biting comments on my positive attitude. The first one hurt. I was new at the job and didn’t want my supervisor to think ill of me. Never mind that I had 75 good reviews from the same class. Months later I began to laugh at that review. It was so over the top, it gradually became funny.
Then there are the comments that offer constructive criticism. Criticism from someone I respect is a gift. Some criticisms have to do with opinion, which I may or may not agree with. Those force me to think about why or how I wrote on a subject. One comment on a FaithWriters contest entry led to an online friendship with a dear lady who pointed out a glaring error.
So I was caught off guard when a Good Friday piece I wrote for a website received a rating of -2. Negative two? This online newspaper allows readers to click a green “up” or red “down” arrow to rate articles. I’ve had articles receive a 1 rating, maybe a 2, and sometimes a 0. But this I had to investigate. Scrolling down to the comments section I found....nothing. No complaint. No idea where I didn’t connect with the readers--2 of them, obviously. Nada. Zip. Zero. Uh, make that -2.
I’ve mulled this over since Easter and found that what I feel most is embarrassment. Among the articles with 4’s and 6’s and even 0’s there stands my -2. It’s the big fat C- on the page.
No one is going to read my article again, I thought. It’s been brushed away. Branded. Nothing to see here....move along. That’s what annoys me. I want one more edit. One more attempt. The courtesy of one comment I can wrap this rating around.
Then I move on and laugh at myself as I shake my fist at invisible critics.
Like I said, I’m recovering.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Bunny Munch Baskets
The preschool Easter party was this week and I signed up to bring a “fruit/vegetable” snack. Great. Now all I needed was an idea.
An Internet search revealed that most of the featured snacks for Easter involved eggs or some sort of carbo-sweet. Wrong food groups. So I invented this basket of bunny food to add some fun nutrition to our festivities.
The basket is simple: a paper cupcake liner. I put coconut in a baggie with a few drops of green food coloring. A few shakes later I had edible grass to line the baskets.
I filled the baskets with colorful fruits and veggies that a bunny might eat. I like the contrast between orange and green and we all know that bunnies like carrots, so matchstick carrots went in first. Grapes, apples, and cantaloupes are on sale this week, but there’s no end to what can be included: strawberries, thin celery sticks, blueberries. Slice the larger fruits into bite sized pieces. I cut and prepared everything in advance, so assembly only took a few minutes.
There was a little something for everyone. Some kids passed on the coconut, but eyes sparkled at the colorful array of goodies.
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
Some Kind of Initiation
Been subbing as an assistant in one of the classes at DW's preschool. Delightful. The preschool teachers are amazing women who answer tough questions, wipe noses, fill glue bottles, and read stories all at the same time. One of the best things about teaching is that you never stop learning and you're steeped in the environment of the inquisitive. I would never have thought to ask, as one child did, "What time of day do lizards hatch out of their eggs?"
Sunday, April 05, 2009
One Little Palm Branch
Friday, April 03, 2009
Painted Toast
- Put 2 Tbs. milk into bowls--one bowl for each color
- Add 5 drops food coloring into each bowl
- Stir