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Marian Vischer

Marian Vischer

5 Things I Learned in October

When I can, I love to dish about what I’ve learned at the end of each month. The Let’s Share What We Learned posts are hosted by Emily Freeman as a “monthly community link-up to share the fascinating, ridiculous, sacred, or small.”

Mine is usually just ridiculous.

In no particular order, here are 5 things I’ve learned in October.

1. Good deals sometimes cost me a lot of money.

A freebie dresser from a friend = my husband’s herniated disc last fall. A $150 Pottery Barn leather recliner {via Craiglist} almost herniated it again. My economist husband is quick to remind me that these sorts of setbacks are referred to as “transaction costs.” I always receive his fancy econ terms with much joy and enthusiasm.

The latest casualty is a super heavy Broyhill cocktail table that fell out of my van and onto my foot a few weeks ago. It may have hurt worse than having a baby because I would have paid $1000 on the spot for an epidural.

I just ditched the orthopedic boot in exchange for this snazzy shoe. Who’s bringing sexy back?

Perks: I’m Frankenstein for Halloween.

Also? I may have googled “cute post-surgical shoes.” They don’t exist. {Dear Manolo Blahnik, get on this.}

2. There really is a mug that keeps your coffee hot for hours. 

My in-laws came to visit the week after we moved in to lend a helping hand. My dear father-in-law, who may have a reputation for splurging on the latest and greatest swag, gifted my husband and I with one of these — the Yeti Rambler.

My coffee stays hot for HOURS. No lie. And if I want my Diet Dr. Pepper to stay ice cold, the YETI can do that too. They’re spendy so if you can’t treat yourself, put it on your Christmas list.

3. You can be lazy. And still be a genius.

Stop what you’re doing and go here. Subscribe to the Lazy Genius Collective and thank me later.

You guys, I have ALL THE LOVE for this! It’s the common sense, encouragement, and hilarity I wish was around ten years ago when I was way too angsty about stupid stuff. And who am I kidding? I can still be angsty about stupid stuff.

Kendra is the queen / lazy genius brainchild. Here’s a little snippet from her:

Like you, I’ve listened to everyone from neighbors to Dr. Oz talk about how I should live, how I should parent, and what swimsuit looks best on my body shape. (Answer: I like winter.) 

Over the years, I’ve learned that if my worth is based on how well I do everything I should, then I am 100% a terrible human being. So you know what I did? I quit trying so hard. And I started being a genius about being lazy. It’s the way to live, you guys, and I’d love for you to join me.

The LGC will be your best friend about everything from cooking and editing your life to taking your fun more seriously. Because we can all “be a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don’t.”

I’m not affiliated with the LGC in any way. But you guys know I’m a gal who’s all about writing the real and kicking perfectionism to the curb and being reasonable about our expectations.

4. Little kids classrooms are a personality lab. And personality labs are super fun for me. 

Since school started, I’ve been going to work each morning in a first-grade classroom until lunchtime. I just haven’t written about it here. My job is to be a “shadow” for a sweet young friend of mine who’s the hardest working first grader I know. She has Down Syndrome but she can read and write and ace spelling tests like a boss. Having a shadow allows her to learn in a typical first-grade classroom along with her peers.

What I didn’t expect was all the fun I’d have getting to know the other kids in the class. Already, their little personalities are showing up in big ways. I can tell you which kid is going to be a teacher and which one may end up on American Idol and which one will go to art school. They are so wonderfully and hilariously unique.

They also say things like, “Mrs. Vischer, can you help me order-betize these words?” and “You are almost 20 years older than my mom!”

I’ve been super observant all my life, paying attention to things that a lot of people overlook. {And overlooking a lot of stuff that happens to be really important information. Flashbacks to 9th grade Geometry class.} But paying attention to the ways tiny humans interact with one another and with the world around them is absolutely one of my favorite things.

5. Moving saps your will to live.{and makes you dramatic}

I wrote about our house story and the move itself in my last post so I won’t rehash it here. I had visions of moving in and painting and unpacking boxes like a ninja. But now we’re here and apparently our real life schedules don’t pause just because we moved. Neither do falling tables and injuries and jobs and kids.

Anyway, I underestimated how the ordeal of the last year and the move itself sapped what little was left of my energy and motivation. We may be living out of boxes and staring at beige walls for a while is what I’m saying. {I did buy the Nester’s Cozy Minimalist course in hopes that she will boss me into setting up house one room at a time.}

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Thanks to Emily for giving me a reason to think about what I’ve learned this month and forcing a blog post even though I’m living in a sea of unpacked boxes and dirty laundry {and eating Halloween candy for breakfast.}

What did YOU learn in October?

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A Tale of Two Houses. A Story of Hope.

Several weeks ago I snuggled up with my boys in their bunk beds as a blanket of grief covered us. It was our last night in the only home either of them had ever known.

My youngest was wracked with guilt and sadness because we were abandoning the house itself. What would the house do without us? How would it feel?

My oldest son told me that this felt like The Giving Tree. Our home was like the tree who had loved us unconditionally, housing our play and family dinners and nightly slumber. Though we’d leave for school and work and vacations, the house was always there, awaiting our return. And now? We were just walking away, leaving it to strangers.

I’d done my best to soldier on until that point. But y’all, The Giving Tree analogy? My seven-year-old crying into his pillow, asking me what our house would do without its family? I flat out came undone and surrendered to the tidal wave of emotion.

Homes are sacred places. For nearly ten years our family stored up memories and meals and milestones within the walls of that little house.

I remember the day we brought our youngest home from the hospital. I placed him on our king-size bed while his big brother and sister oohed and aahed over his brand newness. Along with their pet lizard. In a jar. On my bed.

I remember holding sick toddlers wrapped in blankets out in the cold nighttime air, praying away croup at 2 am on the porch, waiting for the medicine to kick in.

I remember birthday parties in the driveway and a yard full of neighbor kids.

My boys learned to golf in the backyard.

My baby learned to walk in the living room.

My daughter skipped into the house at the age of four holding her Barbie. She walked out for the last time holding her iPhone.

My youngest locked us out of our bathroom with the handcuffs he got for Christmas one year.

Ten years is a long time to stay in a single place. It’s by far the longest I’ve ever lived anywhere. And because home is the space where we shelter our people and root our hearts, we don’t uproot without struggle. And a lot of emotion. Leaving home is hard, even when it’s good and right.

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If you’re a regular here, you already know that this journey has been a long one. We’ve planned to move for a couple of years now, longing to have a bit more wiggle room for our growing-up family, a few more walls for their introvert mom, and closer proximity to the schools and church and places that are part of daily life. But houses sell quickly here and we knew that we’d have to sell ours before we could look seriously at anything else.

In July of 2014, confident and excited, we were finally ready to put our house on the market. Just getting to that point was a miracle in itself. My husband and I don’t make decisions quickly. I worked my fingers to the bone instead of enjoying summer with the kids. We spent more money than we’d expected trying getting the house staged. I knew exactly what to do because blogs and HGTV are the boss of me. The house listed a month later.

Crickets chirped. And chirped. And chirped.

Through a long and painful fall and winter, at the worst possible moments, our little house suddenly began showing up a storm. {Dear Timing, you are mean.}

In the midst of grief and chaos, I’d get a request to show the house, put my hiney into high gear, fuss at my kids, load up the extra junk in the van and back out of the driveway like a crazy lady. The kids can tell you the drill. I’d be in tears, apologizing for yelling at them in all of the hurry and stress, and we’d pray that it was the last showing.

Eventually, I lost count of how many showings I’d killed myself over. We got wonderful feedback every single time about how cute it was and how well it showed. We were even under contract last February, two buyers dueling over the house on the same day. But the stars never aligned. Within a week of the contract falling through, our car died and our washer broke and my youngest child got a scary virus that made his legs not work for a few days.

And with so many things falling apart and breaking down all at once, my heart followed suit and broke a little bit too.

Enthusiastic and well-meaning acquaintances who didn’t know our ordeal talked about how someone just showed up at their house! That wasn’t even on the market! And offered them over market price!

At least three times I heard versions of this story from different people as I smiled through gritted teeth and told them how HAPPY I WAS FOR THEM.

I sat on a throne of lies.

In May we finally pulled it off the market. I was bitter at the house, envious of others, and drained by the ordeal and seemingly misspent stress, money, and energy. We needed a break. We didn’t know how long the breather would last. We didn’t really talk about it at all, which was a problem. And our lack of communication may have simmered into a rapid boil that necessitated a trip to our counselor.

God bless our dear, long-suffering-counselor-turned-friend. Jon got us on the same team again, reminding us that if we weren’t communicating and praying about this together, then we weren’t inviting God to be part of it. And why would we want to go one step further in this journey without asking God to be in it with us?

It was the turning point we needed and the truth we’d forgotten. {Dear God, we do want you to be All In.}

Walls came down as we communicated humbly with one another. We apologized and forgave. We prayed together and kept at it, asking for wisdom regarding our current house and for the provision of a new one, if that was God’s will.

And just like that, we decided to put it back on market and see what happened. We didn’t tell anyone at first but our realtor. The sign went back up. We had six showings in one week and were under contract less than two weeks later.

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Now here’s where it gets crazy.

The morning after it was obvious that we were going under contract and things looked solid, a house popped up on the internet, for sale by owner. I literally gasped and went running into the living room where my husband sat. The location, the price, the specs — all exactly what we were looking for. We couldn’t find a phone number so we hopped in the car and drove straight over. There was a little sign with a phone number. We called and made an appointment to see it later that afternoon.

It was the one we wanted — a sturdy, soulful house built in 1959. Best of all, it had a screen porch the size of a living room. If you know me, you know that I would live in a cardboard box if it had a screen porch. It’s something I’ve wished for since childhood.

It also had flowers and beauty and just the right amount of quirk and wonkiness to suit me, a gal who loves storied and lived-in things.

Friends of ours live right down the street and they texted the owners, telling them that they knew us and probably assuring them that we weren’t killers.

I’d enlisted our parents and a few others to pray, to really pray that we would find favor with the owners and that what seemed impossible would become a reality. Because even though the contract on our house was a good one, the couple couldn’t close until October 25th! And it was still the end of July! What person in their right mind would agree to that? Especially when the market was hot and inventory was low and they could sell it ten times over before October.

But they did. They agreed. Because they wanted the right family in this house that they loved so much.

Two days later, we pulled into the driveway to sign a contract. A text from our realtor came in. “No explanation for this but your buyers have agreed to move the closing up a month. Congratulations! You get to close September 25th instead of late October.”

I sat in my minivan and sobbed. My heart could not hold all the goodness.

The next two months were hardly smooth sailing. We had some major hurdles. It was going to take a miracle for our house to appraise for what we needed it to. See, that was the thing that tanked us when we were under contract back in Febrauary. Our area had a string of unlucky comps right after our house went on the market the first time. We were powerless to do anything about that.

Lo and behold, just two weeks before our appraisal {which providentially kept getting delayed}, several houses on our little street all sold higher than houses had been selling. You can guess what happened. Our appraisal was golden. {Dear Timing, I’m sorry for what I said about you earlier.}

A friend of mine told me months ago that she didn’t think our house would sell until we found the one that was meant to be ours. I didn’t know how right she was.

We got a buyer. The next morning our new house showed up.

“It’s funny,” the owner told us when we first looked at the house. “We’ve been trying to get this house ready to sell for months and just haven’t been able to. We put a For Sale by Owner sign up two weeks ago but didn’t get around to putting it on Zillow until yesterday.”

You know what they say, “Timing is everything.”

And timing does not belong to me.

For so many months, God had allowed us to wait and wonder and strive and struggle. I’ve doubted and despaired. At every low point, I’ve been faced with a choice: try harder or trust.

This story may seem like it’s about something as superficial as a house but it’s really about so much more than that. God uses the stuff of real life to peel back the layers of my heart and reveal its true state. I had a plan. I had a timetable. I wanted certain outcomes. Despite so much time and toil, nothing was working out.

God had a plan too. And his plan had more to do with the state of my heart than the sale of my home. I’ve been through trials far weightier and more heart-wrenching than selling a house and finding a new one. But this road has been its own special journey of faith and trust and repeated surrender. I did everything “right.” I consulted the experts. I staged and re-staged. I took every showing seriously.

It simply wasn’t the time. And no amount of toil would make it so. Psalm 127:1-2 comes to mind. I was trying to build my own house, “eating the bread of anxious toil” instead of trusting God, the one who asks, “Will you literally rest and trust me?”

Unless the Lord builds the house,
    those who build it labor in vain.
Unless the Lord watches over the city,
    the watchman stays awake in vain.
It is in vain that you rise up early
    and go late to rest,
eating the bread of anxious toil;
    for he gives to his beloved sleep.

That right there is some truth.

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Months ago I began praying that God would provide in a way that was ridiculously beyond what we could over orchestrate. Not in the form of impressiveness or a fancy place. I just wanted a story where He got all the glory.

He absolutely came through on that one.

Redemption is the theme of my life and the older I get, the more enamored I become with the glory of God and the smallness of me. He keeps allowing opportunities for me to strive, hit a wall, and finally give up / get out of the way so that He can do my very favorite thing of all: show up in beautiful and unlikely ways, doing wonderful, redemptive works that absolutely slay me.

It’s been an agonizing journey. I am simultaneously elated about our new home yet still grieving the loss of our old house and the dear community of people we lived among for ten years. Like I said, uprooting doesn’t come without a struggle and our roots feel more like exposed nerves — sensitive and painful and not wanting to be touched.

I had to stuff a lot of emotions just to get through the packing and moving process and they all came tumbling out the night before we moved when my boys played The Giving Tree card. {Dear Boys, do not every pull that one again.} They came tumbling out the moment I walked out of my door for the last time. They still tumble out when I least expect them to.

Moving, no matter how near or far, is one of life’s most baneful chores and emotional roller-coasters. I joke that it’s taken years off my life. My insides are a mess and my spirit is fragile. I’m exhausted and headachey and jumpy and overwhelmed, even in the midst of such gratitude. It’s a mixed bag is what I’m saying, and I know I’ll need some time to make peace with the change, even though it’s change I hoped and prayed for.

I also need a nap. Every day for the rest of my life.

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I’m sure I’ll be writing more about the house. A new house means new beginnings and new projects and new ways of doing life. But I can’t begin to do any of that without the backstory.

Always, the backstory. Because redemption isn’t even a thing if we don’t have that. And this house is such a picture of redemption. Not because it’s new or posh or in the best part of town. Those things weren’t on our wishlist. But there’s so much about it that’s just right for us, gifts that feel like a kiss from God who keeps reminding me that his heart for us is one of preservation and blessing. Not in some slick prosperity gospel sort of way, but in a personal sort of way. This is the place for us, given at just the right time.

All along, God has kept our family when the odds were against us. The world launched its missiles through our windows and kicked at our foundation. We almost gave up. Rebuilding has been a slow and messy process. We wouldn’t have made it without hope. We still don’t make it without hope.

In so many ways, this home is hope realized.

The day before we closed, in the midst of blinding rain and mud and moving plans going awry and expenses climbing and having miles to go before we slept, I blubbered to my husband on the phone. “I know this is hard and feels impossible. Everything about this process has been messy. But we’re doing this together. We’re moving as a family. All of us. God has been so gracious. Crazy as it all feels right now, this is redemption.”

And it is.

Thanks for journeying with me — for your encouragement and support. We are far from settled. Between marriage and motherhood and boxes and doctor visits and my jobs and his job, daily life is full. I’m forced to find new ways to weave regular-ish writing into these busy days. It is my comfort, my coping mechanism, and my worship.

And once again, I am both bewildered and comforted by Timing. If I’ve learned anything, it’s the reality that time does not belong to me. Though I wrestle with the frustrations of that, I’m also soothed by the promise of seasons and change and how there really is a time for everything. This is a time to re-settle, to do my right-now work, to love my people and run my home and choose to rest in the midst of the undone.

In the whirling hum of these sacred tasks, I still get to hope.

To trust the One who is the giver of all things.

To unwrap each season and each gift as He ordains.

Thank you again for walking alongside me and sharing in my story.

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When Pancakes are Passengers in Your Minivan. 10 Things to Know When Life is Cray Cray.

We just moved. For weeks now, life has been pure, unadulterated chaos. I tend to exaggerate but this time, I promise I’m not. Instead of unpacking boxes, I want to tell you a few things because it feels important. Also? Procrastination / Waiting for Mary Poppins.

I actually wrote this post a week before we moved but never published it. I suppose getting to the computer felt too overwhelming.

Now we’re on the “other side,” so to speak. We’re still far from settled but we’re in. {Praise hands!} Life will be crazy for a while / forever so these 10 things will probably be relevant for longer than I wish.

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1. Call in all your favors and say no to everything. Now is not the time to go above and beyond.

2. Marie Callendar makes delicious meals in family-size containers. And by delicious I mean they will at least fill up your family and save you from cooking and cleaning and another run through the drive-thru, lest the Chick-Fil-A clerk say, “Oh! You again?”

3. Accept that you will do things like obsessively organize papers that have been in files for 15 years instead of packing actual boxes. You might drink a glass of wine in the attic and message your grad school friend and ask her what to do with ALL THE STUFF that proves you once had a brain and once read important books and once wrote papers with words like “hegemony.”

4. Children are ridiculous and cannot begin to appreciate your grown-up stress. They will have the audacity to ask for things like clean underwear and help with homework. The nerve. Dismiss them as much as you can and assure yourself that you are helping them develop resilience.

5. You are fully convinced that you will never again feel settled, normal, or sane. You dream of sleeping for 10 days straight but ironically, you need medicine to stay asleep.

6. You will drive by 7 / 11 and decide it’s a fine time to stress-eat a Snicker’s Bar and inhale a Big Gulp. Then you will hate yourself and also 7 / 11 for the being the temptress that she is. You will also want another Snicker’s.

7. You will drive around with a real plate of half-eaten pancakes soaking in syrup because how can you manage all this stuff and feed your kids and get them to school on time? You will wallow in shame because who drives around with real dishes and syrup like it’s a normal thing? You will take a picture anyway because you can’t make this stuff up.

8. You will get hungry around lunchtime and those dang pancakes will still be there, suddenly looking more tasty than shameful.

9. You discover that leftover pancakes marinated in syrup and sunshine are surprisingly delicious.

10. You will write a blog post when you should be packing or unpacking. Because this blog isn’t going to write itself and also because you had an iced grande Americano {sweetened and with extra cream} and it is THE JUICE, people. Go get one and feel sorry for me.

{And one more just for good measure.}

11. You will look longingly at retirement communities, even though you are only 42. Because the idea of having some assisted living sounds glorious.

The End.

Love, Marian

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Living in the Place Between Dreams Come True & Dreams That Aren’t Yet

My fourteen-year-old daughter has an obsession with aging. She thinks this obsession is an actual disorder because she doesn’t know any of her peers who have the same fear of getting older. It’s not a vain sort of thing. Nothing to do with wrinkles or cellulite or graying hair. If you’re in a conversation with her for more than five minutes she will likely ask you these questions:

What was your favorite age?

Do you love your age right now?

Is this point in your life what you thought it would be? 

She’s a curious girl by nature. If you have been her teacher or pastor or youth leader, you know this already. She hopes to be a talk show host when she grows up so that she can ask questions for a living.

But fear is what’s really at the root of her aging angst.

Fear that the best has already passed her by. Fear because it’s all going by too fast.

She desperately misses the carefree days of childhood and I miss them for her. She hates feeling rushed and increasingly responsible for so many tasks. The pressure to perform well in everything — from school and sports to relationships and even in her spiritual life — it’s just too much for the wild and untamed spirit that masquerades as a young lady. Pressure doesn’t always have a shut-off valve. Not in today’s world.

She says she doesn’t want to have kids because moms are always stressed. And that she doesn’t want to be a grown-up because it doesn’t seem like anyone is actually living the life they dreamed of when they were young.

Go ahead and imagine the guilt I feel for unknowingly communicating that motherhood is stress and misery. That the life she sees me living is not aspirational or inspirational. At least not from her vantage point. Cue the knife already.

Kids tell the truth and we should be grateful for that. Time has dimmed our grown-up vision but kids see life in a way that’s needfully {yet horrifyingly} honest.

During a recent conversation with her, I said that I actually have everything I ever dreamed of. The truth spilled out so naturally and honestly, it caught me by surprise. It was so good to hear those words come out of my own mouth.

The baggage of the past is an ever-present bully. Days tick by with their endless demands and mundane duties. Problems spring up like dandelions. The everyday is no fairy tale and don’t we know it?

Yet as I considered the life that younger Marian once dreamed of — a loving husband, beautiful children, a home of our own, fulfilling work, a community to put down roots — I realized that it’s all come true.

I needed to realize that’s it’s all come true.

Even as I type this, tears well up because gratitude overwhelms me. It’s all come true but that doesn’t mean the road has been paved with glitter.

Instead it’s been paved with redemption. It’s still being paved with redemption.

Devastation and brokenness have been steady companions through many dark nights of the soul. Don’t confuse dreams-come-true with a storybook life. The life I have now is not the life I should have. We’ve beat the odds and we know. God’s goodness to me and to my family is beyond what I can tell you.

So why don’t I live that way? Why don’t I receive my own life with the thankfulness it deserves?

Why am I looking at your kids who don’t seem to struggle like mine do?

Why do I envy her full-time writing life while I’m juggling jobs and motherhood and teeny bits of writing in the margins of my beautiful but crowded life?

Why am I jealous of that mom’s easygoing personality?

How can I have everything I once dreamed, yet still feel that my life isn’t enough? Or that it’s too much? Depending on the day.

It would be easy to offer simple answers: envy, discontentment, selfishness, baggage, entitlement, pride, idealism.

Check, check, check, check, check, check and check. I know all of that already. If naming the problem completed the solution, we could all move on in peace and never complain again.

I can’t possibly answer these existential questions in a blog post. But in so many ways these are the truest tensions of my life. It’s the theme of nearly everything I write here. “Writing the real” is about making peace with the beautiful and crazy life I have — with its epic and everyday messes, its seen and unseen gifts. It’s about receiving the beauty and the brokenness. It’s about acceptance and celebration and gratitude right where I am.

There’s more to say but my word count is already too high.

In my next post I’ll write about some of the ways these tensions play out in my real life. I’ll also talk about the ways that peace, acceptance, hope, and surprise are showing up as faithful companions and kicking discontentment to the curb. It’s a timely topic as this unfolding season of transitions invites me to embrace the family, priorities, work, home, and people right in front of me, chaos and all.


P.S. I wrote most of this post a couple of weeks ago, back when I was silly enough to think I’d be able to keep writing semi-regularly through this season’s transitions of three kids in three schools, a lovely new job, and packing up our house for a move in just a few weeks. You guys, life is BANANAS right now. All day, every day, I’m obsessed with when I might be able to lie down or when it’s safe to take another hit of caffeine.

So when I say that I’m going to write another post that picks up where this one leaves off, I’m sincere but I’m also realistic. I don’t know when I’ll be back to write it. But telling you that is a way of inviting myself back to the writing desk, even if my posts are scrawled out in bits and pieces over weeks instead of hours.

Always, thanks for grace.

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And thanks to those who entered the giveaway for a signed copy of Simply Tuesday! The winner is:

Anna Symonds

I sent you an email, Anna. Congratulations!

If you didn’t win, hop on over to amazon {or your favorite bookseller} and grab a copy of this wonderful book. It’s a dear companion these stressy days, reminding me that “the soul and the schedule don’t follow the same rules.”

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The Stressy State of Things & Why Small-Moment Living Just Might Save My Life {+ book winners & another giveaway}

School started yesterday and I’m “feeling all the feels,” as they say.

My girl started high school, my middle son started middle school, and my baby son {even though he’s 7} walked into elementary school for the first time without big brother as his faithful companion.

True confession. I was so ready for them to go back to school because this summer we all earned PhDs in Togetherness.

And then they did all go back to school and I can’t stop crying about the whole business. I think it’s simply the emotional occasion for all the bottled-up stress and apprehension to come spilling out.

Have a seat and let me catch you up on the state of things:

After a year of trying, not trying, and then trying again to sell our sweet little house, it looks like we’re actually moving.

I’m so afraid to announce things before they happen because we are not famous for our smooth sailing. We are famous for nothing going as planned. But assuming there are no bombs, floods, or other catastrophes, we’re moving from our home of nearly ten years.

It’s a local move and if everything works out, I’ll tell you all about it because it is a story indeed.

September is not known for her carefree days but that’s when the Vischer family is set to pack up one house and settle into another. Amid drop-off and pick-up lines and homework and cheer and football games and jobs, we’re going to move. Try to hide your jealousy.

Moving takes years off my life so I will be 180 in moving years once we finally get settled.

I started a part-time job in April. I begin another one next week. Both are fantastic jobs — family-friendly and meaningful, jobs that use my gifts.

It’s simply a lot of transition in a short amount of time.

So yesterday I tried not to hyperventilate and cuss in front of my kids when I discovered those tiny kitchen moths had set up shop among the stale crackers in my pantry.

When crisis or change comes my way, I can struggle with sleep and stability. My overwrought brain doesn’t know where to find the shut-off valve. While I have sometimes shocked myself as Grace Under Pressure during a season of crisis or even that one time when the toddler threw up on a road trip and we had to hose him and everyone else off in a sketchy West Virginia car wash, I’m also the one hyperventilating over pantry moths.

The timing of so many things is lost on me right now.

But there’s one gift that’s come at just the right time — Simply Tuesday: Small-Moment Living in a Fast-Moving World by Emily P. Freeman.

Earlier this summer, my name was randomly chosen to be part of her launch team. That means I got to read the book early. Friends, it has been a gift to my anxious heart these summer months.

This is a book about true home.

About doing our work but releasing outcomes.

About settling into our small and ordinary places.

About all the places our soul runs to in search of life, only to leave us dissatisfied.

Most of all, for me, it’s a book about keeping company with Jesus through every anxious moment, every runaway thought, every desire and devastation, every welcome and unwelcome transition.

I love what Emily says about keeping company with Christ instead of keeping pace with the world. Her words are always like a gentle hush for my soul.

As citizens of an invisible kingdom, we refuse to take our living cues from the world that says to build, grow, measure, and rush to keep up. Instead we take our cues from the new hope alive within us, from the life of Christ who has made our hearts his home. We’ll stop trying to keep up with the fast-moving world and, instead, we’ll settle down and keep company with the small moments of our lives…

We don’t know where these moments might lead, what we might grow into, whom we might influence, what impact we might have. That is not our business. Instead our job is to stay right here with our friend Jesus. To know that he is with us and within us, and he’ll stay no matter what.

We’ll find our places to call home. 

We’ll find our right-now work. 

We’ll gather with our Tuesday people. 

We’ll write our hidden prayers in the fog.

We’ll let love lead.

I always need the message of small-moment living but I especially need it during this season when my world feels like it’s spinning on a wonkier tilt than normal — when there is much to manage, outcomes I can’t control, dicey emotions that show up without notice, a new job and precious people to welcome into my life, deep longings that will tenderly be placed up on a shelf for a time.

Throughout these shifty days, there is the promise of the presence of Christ as I gather up my many things and let him carry the burden.

Emily has the loveliest video you can watch. It’s both an introduction and an invitation. Go watch and you’ll see what I mean. And if you’d rather not wait to get your hands on a copy, I don’t blame you. You can order here.

Order before August 28th and you can get a small group conversation guide for FREE!

This weekend I’m looking forward to attending a launch party for Simply Tuesday. I’m taking my extra book so Emily can sign it for you!

That’s right, another giveaway! I’m keeping it simple so just leave a comment here on the blog about anything at all or on the blog’s Facebook page.

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Thanks so much for those who entered last week’s giveaway and to Kindel for letting me team up with her! For those of you who are new to this place and to some of the online places I hang out {like the blog’s Facebook and Twitter pages}, WELCOME. I’m so glad to have you as part of this community.

And now for the winners:

Congrats you guys! You’ve been notified by e-mail so I can get your addresses.

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Treat Yourself: Summer Before School Starts Edition

It’s Saturday and I’m in an end-of-summer stupor. Our kids start school next week and, well, it is time. {Says the mom who’s gone all twitchy by this point.}

Togetherness is just the best, except when it’s worn out its welcome. And then some relational and physical space is in order. {Dear Public School, I love you.}

Our family is presently in a time of transition and decision-making and I am a hundred shades of deep thoughts and big feelings. I’m an anxious mess is what I’m saying. We’ll dish more about all this later.

For now, I leave you with a few weekend reads to ease your summer brain into the next season.


Mirrors by Shannan Martin at {in}courage, in which she shares the “sure community of a cold ham sandwich.”

On Thursday I texted my sister paragraph-long texts about some specific parenting challenges and there’s consolation in the knowing of each other’s kids like they’re your own. Also, I shared supper with another mom and her kids this week and felt the sweet swell of gratitude for community, and a little less alone in life’s challenges and transitions.

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Have you seen this loungey sofa / daybed / guest bed made with a full-size mattress, a $50 IKEA slipcover, and whatever spare pillows and linens you have?

I am so doing this you guys.

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Don’t Call Kids “Smart” by James Hamblin, The Atlantic

All three of my kids have wildly different, beautiful brains. For me, this is one of the great joys, challenges, and fascinations of motherhood. We have everything from dyslexia and ADHD to “gifted” all under our one small roof. I’m amazed and disheartened by the ways their intelligence identities become entrenched at such an early age. But I have hope that we can begin talking to our kids in ways that can turn the tide.

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Order Simply Tuesday: Small-Moment Living in a Fast-Moving World between now and August 28th and receive a FREE small group conversation guide. I’ve read Emily’s latest book from cover to cover and I’m keeping it with me as a trusty companion as I wade through the transition of our fall schedule.

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Did you miss my big giveaway I posted on Wednesday? I’ve got 4 copies to hand out and there’s still time. Go check it out.

Savor this late-summer weekend, sweet friends!

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6 Things I Learned in July

1. Jim Gaffigan is on Instagram.

This isn’t news but I just started following him. Think photos of food, Jim’s face made out of food, and the occasional family pic with hilarious captions one might expect from our favorite pale, McDonald’s-loving, Hot Pocket-lampooning comedian. {For the record, I also follow his wife, Jeannie Gaffigan.} #shamelessfan

2. Watching my boys play golf together swells my heart like nothing else.

I always envisioned myself as a boy mom. Even though I desperately hoped there would be a girl in the mix {and there is}, a house full of boys never seemed far-fetched to me. I don’t exactly have a house full but the males do outnumber the females in our home.

When the baby of our family was born, the youngest was already four. I worried that they wouldn’t be close as brothers because four years seemed like a hefty gap at that point. Even now, the older one will soon begin middle school while his baby brother is still in second grade.

Their personalities are nothing alike. But brotherhood seems to cover a multitude of differences.

They share a room and drive each other crazy yet neither one can bear the idea of not sleeping in the same room together. They also share a love of golf and have played until after dark many, many nights this summer.

On Monday, little brother officially caddied for big brother in a local JPGA tournament. Y’all, I couldn’t stop taking pics and smiling. I literally thought my heart would burst. I can’t tell you why this makes me happier than almost anything. I only know that it does. I hope that they always have each other’s back. Also? Seeing a tiny kid carry a set of clubs as tall as he is and advise big brother to either use his 7-iron or a hybrid is possibly the most adorable thing ever.

3. Primer is a girl’s best friend. Especially in the summer.

Makeup is still there!

So I’ve not worn makeup more than I’ve worn makeup this summer. Such is the life of a mom who has three kids, a house on the market, six showings in one week, and working from home. I know, I know. I was all about my Bobbi Brown makeup last month and I still am. I’m also just trying to survive and sometimes getting pretty doesn’t make the cut.

But on the rare occasion that I do get semi-gussied up, I’m all about the primer. Without it, makeup vanishes into thin air. These things happen when you’re over 40. My precisely applied eyeliner is all for naught. I tried some inexpensive primer way back when and it was okay but tended to turn into tiny gel beads on my face if I didn’t apply just right.

Recently I sampled some Smashbox primer at Sephora and my eyeliner stayed put! All day! So did everything else, even though I was walking around in the heat for hours. MIRACULOUS. I bought myself a trial size of this and this. A little goes a long way and I wanted to try it over time before I bought a full-size tube. I’ve heard there are other great primers out there so if you have a favorite, I’d love to know.

4. Having a writing companion is a game changer.

Starbucks and exercise ball / desk chairs are fine companions but they can’t take the place of an actual person.

Sometimes you become slowly acquainted with someone who’s at the same stage as you on just about everything — marriage, motherhood, work, writing. You have similar dreams, similar ways of seeing the world, similar obsessiveness with Anne Lamott. It’s a gift is what it is.

I met Kimberly Coyle two years ago at She Speaks. We got to hang out again last year at Allume. But my first introduction to Kimberly was many summers ago when we each wrote guest posts for Chatting at the Sky, Emily Freeman’s blog. I loved Kimberly’s writing style {and may have envied her life abroad.}

Not so long ago we embarked on a little journey to spur one another along in our writing endeavors. I wish I’d started sooner. Regular emails with my writing friend feels like having a grown-up pen pal. Knowing that she’ll check in encourages me to keep writing in the midst of self-doubt and laundry and busy-ness and tiny humans who start fighting as soon as I sit down to write.

5. Starbucks iced coffee in the grocery store.

Get some today. Pour over ice and add a splash of half and half. Your afternoon will thank you.

6. When my outer world swirls crazy, my inner world follows suit. The well-spun words of others can be a gift in times like this.

See above comment about kids and summer and house-selling. Stuff is finally happening with our home but there are a thousand unknowns. I’m giddy one minute and devastated the next. I’ll tell you all about it later. Let’s just say that good sleep eludes me and soul rest sometimes feels like a joke.

I’m thankful for writers. I’m supremely thankful for ancient writers who penned the bread and life words of Scripture. I’m also thankful for today’s writers who speak in relevant ways to age-old struggles that simply wear modern clothes. I’ve mentioned it before {and will again} but Simply Tuesday: Small Moment Living in a Fast-Moving World has been one of those books for me. I was gifted with the chance to read it early and the timing was perfect.

If you haven’t preordered your copy yet, I highly recommend that you do. {Choosing Rest by Sally Breedlove has been another timely companion for my anxious soul this summer.}

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So there you go. Six things I learned in July.

What have YOU learned this summer? We can dish in the comments or on Facebook and Twitter. Or you can chime in with you own list and link up with Emily.

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A Few Words of Rest for Your Weekend

July weekends may conjure up vacation-y vignettes of water and fruity drinks and backyard barbecues. These are the lazy days of summer, are they not?

But as we all know, worry doesn’t brake for weekends.

Just because it’s summer and July and chill, there may still be ends that don’t meet and kids that don’t mind and outcomes that don’t match our expectations.

Savor the gifts. Because they’re always there if you look.

But acknowledge the sorrows too. For our days are surely a sacred swirl of both.

I’m learning to honor the sweet and the severe mercies, knowing that Christ sits with me at the center, the only comforting constant in a world that swirls unpredictably.

A few words of rest for your weekend:

If we are going to live out of a heart at rest, we must make the fundamental faith decision that no matter how deep or urgent the need is, it is ultimately not all up to us. We must choose to believe that God is at work in small things, in underground things, in unseen things, in not-yet-known things. As we rest in this foundational reality, the stress of what we cannot handle becomes a gate to rest.       

— Choosing Rest: Cultivating a Sunday Heart in a Monday World by Sally Breedlove

This weekend, may you be able to stay present for what’s right in front of you, knowing that a loving God handles the unseen things. May quiet trust be “a gate to rest.”

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a few summer posts you may have missed

Essentialism for the High-Maintenance Soul

What We Need to Know When Our Spiritual Leaders Disappoint Us

5 Things I Learned in June

For the Christians Who Fear They’re Not Enough


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Essentialism for the High-Maintenance Soul

It’s 8:22 in the a.m. and my mind has already spun a thousand webs. I’m not what one calls a “linear thinker.” I often struggle to prioritize, to land on that which is most essential for my life, right now.

Inhabiting a world of possibilities each and every day may sound dreamy and optimistic. But it can also kill you. I look at what’s right in front of me and instead of seeing one thing, I see twenty. I drive myself bananas with my wondering, wandering ways.

This spring and summer I have somehow managed to land in the place of thinking in a focused and sustained way about my truest priorities, to nail down the bare bones and commit only to the fundamentals. That may sound selfish but I think of it as life-saving.

I’ve been simmering in this place for months now, feeling a sense of urgency about the whole thing. I blame it on the age of my kids and this season of life that’s literally right around the corner.

It’s a time of transition for the Vischer family.

In a matter of weeks, the oldest starts high school, the second one starts middle school, and the baby begins second grade. Two of my three kids will make significant transitions. As their mom, it feels significant for me too. It also feels like it’s moving too fast.

Four years from right now, I might very well have an overflowing shopping cart of college dorm furnishings from Bed, Bath, and Beyond. Four years seems like a long time when you have actual babies in the house and your days are a never-ending rhythm of diaper changes, spit-up cloths, and board books. But I’m far enough into motherhood to know that it picks up speed at an alarming pace.

Today she’s in braces and cheerleading shoes. I’ll blink. And tomorrow we’ll be planning a graduation party.

Today he’s waiting for a growth spurt, hoping he’s not the shortest kid in the 6th grade. I’ll blink. And tomorrow he’ll be stealing his dad’s shaving cream.

These thoughts can sure enough get a sentimental mama thinking about how to make the most of the next four years, how to pare down life so that I stop spinning in good but misplaced directions. Earlier this summer I made some decisions all by myself. And then I told my husband and one friend.

Because they know me and my propensity to spend my short-supply energy in a hundred different directions, they were surprised by my minimizing ways. My husband, for whom “essentialism” comes naturally, was thrilled. He probably thought, “It’s about time.” But he has too much grace to tell me that.

And then I got some books that only strengthened my resolve. I’ve explored some possibilities that will take some domestic duties off my plate, willing to pay actual cash in exchange for time and energy to love the people and possibilities that matter most. I’m pondering what it means to have less so that we can all actually have more. Less clutter, less maintenance, less busywork, less stress, less time spent managing our stuff and our commitments.

If everything is important, nothing is important. This is true whether we’re talking about our commitments or our possessions. But it’s not always simple to figure out what’s most important, so I’ve needed time and a bit of help.

I don’t know how these desires and decisions will play out in real life. Everything sounds rosy in theory. I only know that we make decisions and tie them on stakes ahead of time. Otherwise people and opportunities will come calling and I’ll feel inspired and / or guilty. I’ll say “yes” when what I’m supposed to say is “no” or at the very least, “not at this time.”

Everyone doesn’t have to be as choosey as me. We’re all wired differently and I’m learning to accept my limitations instead of despising them. I have dear friends who thrive on people and contributing and committee-ing and tasking. They help make the world go round in such vital ways.

But I’m not one of them.

I’m a wife and a mom and a writer. But I try to do so much more and then wonder why I’m spent, dizzy, and unfocused.

Depending on the day, marriage and motherhood require more physical and emotional energy than I naturally have on tap.

I have one child who needs extra encouragement and supervision with academics. So I read books on the learning disabilities this one lives with, feeling ill-equipped to handle these issues yet also knowing that if I don’t help and advocate, no one will.

Mothering takes time, discipline, and a whole lot of emotion.

I have a marriage that’s more of a priority than it’s ever been and also harder to prioritize than ever before. I see why people raise their kids and then divorce after thirty years. The relationship gets lost in the mayhem and we don’t want that. So we fight for the priority of our marriage.

Marriage takes time, discipline, and a whole lot of emotion.

I write for a local organization. I write here on the blog. I sometimes write and speak in other places. I dream of writing books because there are a few of them waiting around in my head. But love for one’s craft doesn’t mean the work is all blue skies and rainbows.

Writing takes time, discipline, and a whole lot of emotion.

Our life is ordinary but that doesn’t mean it’s boring. There are counseling appointments and orthodontist visits, sleepovers and basketball games, church involvement and our small group, extended family gatherings and carved-out moments with my dearest people.

There is also the unforeseen. The friend who gets cancer. The family who needs meals. The child who gets sick and misses two weeks of school.

I don’t want my life to ever become so crowded that it can’t stop for those in need.

Life, no matter how ordinary, takes time, discipline, and a whole lot of emotion.

This fall, Thursday and Friday nights will increasingly mean high school football games instead of quiet evenings at home as a family. And because one football game = a social marathon for Marian the Relational Introvert, I have to eliminate other things so that I’m not mean to the people I live with / in a coma.

Having a high-maintenance soul has forced me to learn my own kind of math and let me tell you, its heavy on subtraction.

But if I don’t tend to my soul, I can’t tend well to the souls of others.

As I consider this new season, on chipping away at the non-essentials so that I’m left with the essentials, I long to make space for the necessary tasking and tending but also for the hoping and the dream-chasing. No one can do this for me.

In his book Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less, Greg McKeown reminds us of this:

If you don’t prioritize your life, someone else will. 

Already there have been some “no’s” that have hurt a little. There may be people who don’t understand, who judge because if they can do it, why can’t I? It’s okay. While affirmation is nice, it’s not a requirement. I’m learning to let go of the obsession to make them see it from my perspective.

I choose to prioritize the relationships and opportunities within my own home. Every day I make the choice. Every day I confess that I don’t exactly know what choosing them even looks like. I only know that too often, I haven’t chosen well, giving the best of myself to other people and pursuits.

I don’t expect to get it right every time. This is more trial and error than formulaic. I’m thankful for grace and I’m thankful for Jesus, the One who guides each of us so personally and lovingly throughout the changing seasons and priorities.

The One who provides in our absence when we say “no,” lovingly reminding us that we don’t keep the world spinning on its axis.

The One who helps us accept our unique personalities and our unique people.

The One who provides us with longings and then provides the hope to see them fulfilled.

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How about you? In a world of pressure and possibilities, how do you pare down your own life to the essentials?

A few terrific reads that are helping me along the way

Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Geoff McKeown

I highly recommend this one. It’s well-written, highly readable, and jam-packed with wisdom. While I don’t agree with all of his statements {such as “If it’s not a clear yes, then it’s a clear no”}, this book is incredibly helpful. I plan to keep it as a reference source for when I need to reboot with a common sense pep talk.

the life-changing magic of tidying up: the japanese art of decluttering and organizing by Marie Kondo

I only heard about this one a few weeks ago. I know! Where have I been? I’m leery of methods and formulas because I don’t believe there’s one-size-fits-all anything. But “KonMari” is more than a method; it’s an altogether different way of thinking about what we keep {and don’t keep.} I haven’t finished it but I can already tell you that it’s a game-changer. Again, I won’t abide by everything she says and some of her points translate better for a Japanese audience. Still, I think it’s incredibly valuable in changing the way we think about our possessions and our homes.

Simply Tuesday: Small-Moment Living in a Fast-Moving World by Emily P. Freeman

You’ll hear more about this book when it releases later in the summer. For now, let me just say that I have savored it. Every now and then you come across a book that begs to sit on your bedside table as a faithful companion, a book that’s a gift for your soul. Though the parts all relate to the whole, I can see myself re-reading specific chapters in the future when I need perspective on a certain issue.

Instead of feeling like I need to do more, this book invites me to embrace smallness and carry all of my anxious thoughts and unmet desires into the presence of Christ. If you’re overwhelmed with the pace of this world, the weight of expectation, and the burden of comparison, might I recommend this one? It releases in August but right now it has a pre-order price of just $7.85!. {That’s half off!} Run, don’t walk, to amazon and treat yourself to this one.

If you enjoyed this post, you may enjoy this short series I wrote last fall: Grace in the New Rhythms

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What We Need to Know When Our Spiritual Leaders Disappoint Us

I was 26 years old when I walked into church for what might have been the last time. Atheism wasn’t an attractive choice but it did seem like the only honest option at the time.

My formative years were an ironic mix of faith and skepticism. I’m living proof that we come out somewhat preprogrammed. Despite growing up in a parsonage and the fact that “God’s house” was my second home, I’ve had doubts about the whole thing since childhood. The doubts weren’t pervasive by any means but they steadily ebbed and flowed through the years and I simply learned to live with them.

Until my mid-20s.

I was married and in graduate school. My mind was ablaze with new ideas and I lapped up the intellectual energy like a heat-scorched traveler. It was a great place for me to be. And also the worst.

Academia and faith have a history of compatibility issues, in case you didn’t know.

The doubts that I’d swept under the rug for years came crawling out and stacked on top of one another until I was staring up at a giant that made my feeble faith look pitiful by comparison.

Each week, my husband and I still went to church, a prominent place downtown where we’d found fellowship with other couples in our stage of life, a choir for me, and a friend from college who served as youth pastor. But something was missing. Years later we realized that it was the Gospel, specifically Jesus, but we were too naive to name that oversight at the time.

Church brought me comfort because it was familiar. But it also twisted the knife.

Through a series of providential mentions, my husband and I visited a new church. I knew that it was a last-ditch effort for me. I was afraid to hope. Thankfully, hope is persistent.

For months we slipped in each Sunday, sat in the back row, and then left. I wasn’t interested in new friends or community; I had all of that already. I was simply desperate for spiritual truth that engaged the mind as much as the heart. I was also desperate for Jesus but again, I couldn’t name that specific need yet.

And in this nondescript church with a small-statured Greek man as its pastor, I found what I’d been looking for.

Week after week he taught God’s Word with intellectual rigor and authenticity. You got the impression that he was right there with you, in the trenches of the struggle, but with a voice of hope and confidence in the Scriptures. His passion and ability to relate were his greatest gifts as a pastor.

On several occasions he counseled me as I sought guidance in my battles with doubt, reassuring my husband and me that thorny doubts may always poke at my flesh to some degree and that God could use them for good. When I initially went to him for counseling, the first question he asked stunned me: “How much sleep are you getting?” I didn’t know what lack of sleep had to do with doubt but I do now. To this day, I find a direct correlation between sleep-deprivation and my spiritual state.

It was this sort of practical wisdom coupled with humility and spiritual insight that made our pastor a literal lifeline for me. At a time when I was drowning in darkness and despair, ready to choose atheism because it seemed the only authentic choice, God used this man to save my life.

Five years later he took his own.

candles

At that point we no longer attended his church because we no longer lived in that city. We were several states away, living and working and hopeful about our future as a young family. But I desperately missed that place. I missed my dear friends, my city, my church and its pastor who I so dearly loved. I still do. The news rocked us to the core.

I’ll never forget the day we boarded the plane back to Lexington, Kentucky for the funeral. It was held at one of the largest churches in town in order to accommodate the crowd. I wept for days and spiraled into a desperate place where hope seemed all but lost.

I don’t know the details of his last days, the unrelenting dark thoughts that compelled him toward a devastating end. I do know that he battled a years-long struggle with depression, that his congregation had recently provided a sabbatical for rest and healing and a trip back home to Greece, how he was adept at persuading others that he was fine.

I also know that he was able to speak so pointedly to my own struggles and doubts because we were kindred spirits, able to plumb the depths of the human experience because we were no strangers to the depths. I know why he told me all those years ago that my persistent doubts may also be God’s unlikely gift.

I write my way out of depths in much the same way that he preached his way out of despair. Grace meets us in the depths because it’s a place of desperation. And desperation strips us down to the bare bones, enabling us to access — for better and for worse — what’s most true about ourselves. It’s why places of pain bring forth some of the best art. Just ask any singer-songwriter.

But every gift has a flip side that can feel like a curse. Ask me how I know.

As he preached the funeral service of his dear friend, Pastor Bryan Chapell said this:

The mountain of fear probably looms largest over my heart because it forces me to question that if one who was so reflective of the light of the Gospel of my Savior could not escape this dark valley, then how can I be sure no such valley of shadows awaits me also?

My dear pastor was indeed reflective of the Gospel of my Savior. But he was not the first spiritual leader who radiated Christ and also devastated his own flock with the painful reality of his own brokenness. He’s not the first or last Christian whose own battle has caused me to fear that darkness or temptation may one day loom too large for me or for someone I love.

Though I know that Jesus can keep me from the shadows, I also know that sometimes He doesn’t. Instead, He remains my companion in the thick of them. There’s no guarantee that the shadows will roll back permanently in this life but there is the promise of the presence of Christ.

Every day I fight to believe that He is enough.

I also painfully admit that while we hope for the promise of deliverance here in this life, sometimes the only deliverance is Heaven itself.

Christ alone is the only true promise.

I write this post in the wake of confusion and devastation as well-loved leaders have not been able to hold fast to the standards set before them. And every time it happens, the shadows roll in again. Not because I think they are less prone to sin and not because I necessarily place them on a pedestal. That’s what I tell myself anyway.

I spiral because it makes me doubt God, something I’m already good at doing.

God, how can you allow him to be your mouthpiece, to minister to vulnerable hearts, when you know he’s neck-deep in his own hidden sin?

How can you allow his mental illness to persist when you know it’s going to lead to an unspeakable end and cause countless people to doubt you as a result?

And let’s not even mention the critics, the haters and the skeptics who come crawling out of the woodwork in jubilation, pointing out that the proof is in the pudding. 

How can I know that you’re true if you speak through the mouth of a liar?

Why do you allow the shadows to eclipse your glory, if only for a time?

One can stay mired in these questions forever. But here’s the problem. Staying in a place where the spotlight is turned on another spares us from having to turn it on ourselves. And it subtly elevates us to a place of righteousness by comparison.

Yes, God can handle our questions and our doubts. He knows we’re human and we’re hurting and we have to walk our individual roads of recovery and healing.

The pitfall comes when we begin thinking in us vs. them categories.

Those who have “fallen from grace” and those who are still in God’s “good graces.”

Those who have committed “moral failure” and those who have taken the “moral high ground.”

Friends, we have all sinned. We have all fallen short of the standard. “Fallen from grace” is an oxymoronic statement. Grace is not a place of pedestals from which people can topple if they’ve become too celebrity or gone without accountability. Grace is the safety net that catches us when we do fall.

Grace is the very air we breathe.

Why do we relegate Grace to its own place and draw a circle around it?

As for “moral failure,” I do that every day. And that’s not just false humility or a low self-concept or total depravity theology talking. {So do you, by the way. And so does your favorite pastor.}

I literally just took a break from writing this post and stormed into the living room where I went off on my kids because they won’t stop fighting. I made my son cry last week because of something hurtful I said out of sheer exasperation. Daily, I grieve my shortcomings. Daily, I have to repent of my failure to love well.

We are a house of moral failure, day in and day out. And we are simultaneously a house of grace. I want this home to be the safest place for all of us to fumble and fail and forgive. Not that we’re there but I pray that grace will continue to abound and lead us in that direction.

I pray the same thing for the church, which should also be the safest place for God’s children to fumble and fail and forgive. But we all know that it’s not.

I write and speak often about “receiving your own life,” about acceptance and beauty and gratitude right where we are. But you have no idea how I have railed against God just this week about the way He’s chosen to orchestrate some things in my own life. I’ve taken my anger out on others. I’ve blame-shifted and nursed everything from greed to entitlement. I’ve been indifferent to the needs of others because I’m too preoccupied with my own desires.

God’s given generously to me yet I’ve rejected his loving provision with my brazen discontentment.

But we consider these lesser sins because no one can see them. My inner thoughts aren’t splashed across headlines, thank God. But if they were, you’d see that I’m a mother and also a murderer, an advocate and also an adulteress, a friend and also a foe to the very ones I’ve called friend.

Jesus himself tells me I’m all of these things, that the shortcomings of my inner life, the sins “behind the curtain,” are as heinous as the ones that play out on the stage. I don’t want to believe that. To do so levels the playing field and I want to believe I’m better than the tangible cheats, that I inherently bring more to the table because my record of external goodness is better than another’s.

But Jesus tells me the truth. Not to send me hiding under the table in shame and condemnation but to set me free from both.

Accusation isn’t the final word. Love is. It’s the ultimate #LoveWins.

He looked at my record, died the death I deserved, and came back to life with a clean slate that He then handed to me as my very own. I’m forgiven, clothed in his righteousness, set free to love and forgive others with this same kind of scandalous love.

Here’s my point:

We can’t love and forgive our stumbling saints unless we’ve grieved our own moral failure and basked in the beauty of forgiveness and freedom.

We can’t extend empathy and compassion to another unless grace has overtaken our own lives with its magnificent beauty.

“Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone…”  {John 8:7}  But we live in such convenient denial, don’t we? Throwing our stones from a distance anyway.

David Zahl said this in a brilliant and timely post he wrote last week:

If we’re only okay with preaching grace in theory — but not when someone is actually in need of it — then perhaps we the peanut gallery are the ones who need to take a sabbatical. 

And then he spoke to what I believe is the heart of the matter for most of us when a spiritual leader disappoints us:

I suspect the real issue is transference. By transference, I’m referring to the way we project or transfer the attributes onto a pastor or leader that we need to be there. We turn them into repositories of our feelings about God, or our parents {or both.} They become a stand-in, consciously or not. At times, the transference is helpful, maybe even necessary. A minister tells you your sins are forgiven, and you hear their word as Gospel. Alas, such transference, especially when amplified by celebrity, seems to turn the messenger into the message — no matter what they are saying. 

For me, devastation over the humanness of my own spiritual shepherds leaves me feeling devastated about God. I turn the messenger into the message even though I’d never want anyone to do that with me.

Ironically, I’m all too aware of my own moral failure. And also shockingly unaware. I’m either in the self-loathing ditch or the self-congratulatory ditch. Thankfully, grace inhabits all the ditches, and the byways in between them.

And it’s in his grace that God allows the feeble kings and queens of this earth to topple, reminding us that there is only one true king, one true shepherd, one true savior.

Leaders whose failings are made public can make me doubt God. I pray that instead, human failures point to the most fundamental tenet of my faith — that there is only onetrue God.

Disappointment in our leaders should reorient our truest hope in the One who will never fail — Jesus. He promises that He’ll never leave us or forsake us. He did not come to break our hearts but to bind them up when this crushing world does.

Sixteen years ago, when my dear Greek pastor attentively listened to my barrage of questions about the dilemma of hypocritical “Christians” throughout the ages — the crusaders, the slaveholders, the lying leaders — he responded with this:

We are called to follow Jesus. We are not called to follow his followers.

How ironic and beautiful that the words from my departed pastor, a man who could not ultimately find peace in this life, are the words that still comfort me with truth each time a Christian lets me down. And each time I let someone down as well.

Authority has its place. Ordained leaders vow to observe certain spelled-out standards. I don’t make light of their responsibilities to God and to the flock. There are real-life consequences when they stumble badly, consequences that carry a ripple-effect of devastation.

But for those who are in Christ, our moral failures don’t determine the final verdict.

Can we just pause for a moment and drink to that? Seriously, let that glorious news settle into your bones.

If you’re glad about this for yourself {and gladness is really an understatement} then be exceedingly glad about it for others! Especially for those who need the power and comfort of this good news when they’re in the valley of shadows.

May we not add insult to injury by judging others more harshly than we judge ourselves.

May we not contribute to “us vs. them” thinking that further divides Christians into categories of righteousness.

May Christ alone be the true object of our faith. And may all of our scarred saints point us to the One who bears the scars on their behalf. And who bears ours too.

A Prayer for the Bewildered and Brokenhearted:

God, forgive us for confusing mere humans with the divine. Forgive us for placing our trust and hope and security in the people and places and programs of this world. Thank you for leaders who make the Gospel, in all of its fullness, so very beautiful and real. Thank you for keeping them by your grace on the days when they run with strength and on the days when they stumble in failure.

Remind us that Grace doesn’t have a fence around it, nor is it a high and lofty place from which your children can fall. Show us that the field is level at the foot of the cross. On that blood-stained ground, we are all the same. And if we don’t believe that’s true, show us our pride. Lovingly bring us to repentance. Show us the glorious face of our one true shepherd who loves without limits, who has won over death itself to bring us home. Only you can use brokenness and sorrow and sin to draw us more intimately to yourself. 

Heal our hurts. Bind our wounds. Keep us from the shadows. Infuse us with Gospel Love. Overtake us with your Grace. Amen.


Postscript:

I’ve been writing this one for over two weeks. Sad news often serves as a trigger for me, opening up old wounds and taking me back to dark nights of the soul that are never as far away as I want to believe. There’s been plenty of sad news lately and this has not been an easy post to write, mostly because I’m still trying to figure out what I believe about some things.

Last week David Zahl, who I quoted, wrote such a compelling piece. I needed it badly. I almost didn’t finish my own post because he said it all with such brilliance and beauty.

But writing is like a sacrament for me, a means of grace that leads my burdened soul to truth one letter at a time. So I wrote this in bits and pieces, stopping when I was up against a wall and starting again as a new day with its new merciful truths formed in my mind.

I finished it primarily for me and as a result, it’s longer than a blog post should be. But I extend it to you anyway, praying that it carries hope and comfort to those who most need it.

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