The time has come to say good-bye! To begin the long slow walk of laying Living Abundantly to rest.

May we have a moment of silence please.



Wakizashi and I will be upgrading Flaming Renaissance to the next version of WordPress (hopefully this weekend) and then we will begin to transfer posts from here to there. Eventually, this poor, sad, blog (which used to be glorious) will be striped down to almost nothing and there will be nothing left for you to come back and visit.

We grieve with you.

But don’t worry. Old blogs don’t die, they simply go into Stand By mode until another blog comes along and takes up their place.

Happily for Living Abundantly there’s already another blog out there, so, if you’ve been wondering why I haven’t been posting over here it’s because I’m posting on Flaming Renaissance – regularly even (if you can imagine such a thing).

So, if you have any links pointing here, or if you subscribe to this feed, I’d appreciate it if you made a few adjustments and started pointing to Flaming Renaissance instead.

The conversation hasn’t died, it’s just taken ona new look – so come on over, I can’t wait to see you there!

p.s. There will be no more NEW posts here, just click on Flaming Renaissance to see what I’m talking about now!

I was just listening to an audio book while I washed the dishes and the author said that we can expect some kind of major upheaval or change in our lives every two months (on average) – that if we don’t we aren’t growing and journeying. Why didn’t someone say something earlier? Knowing that explains a lot about my life!

This month is definitely working it’s way out to be one of those moving and shaking months.

I was invited (by a friend I respect) to attend a meeting with a group of people interested in planting a house church movement in the area. I’ve been kind of leary working my way up to the meeting, mostly because the leader of the group is a pastor (how can someone trained by the old system start a new system without falling back on the old ways?), and because it’s scary – I’ve been outside of the church for something like three years now. I’m hungry for community, and the challange of conversation with like-minded people – but I have absolutely no desire at all for Church or Religion. So, my plan was to be cautiously investigative.

I left last night’s meeting…excited. Yes, actually excited. Not all hyped up, gonna get into this big project, excited like I used to get. Cautiously excited; excited about the possiblities. I’d have to say I felt a definite connection there. A like-mindedness and an open acceptence to who I was and how I approach God (often lacking in Christian circles, they mean well but…). But more than that, there was an alignment of purpose. Who they wanted to reach out to, who they were passionate about, these are the same people I love and believe I’m called to serve. I could see a parallel in our purposes, which told me that I had to at least keep giving them a chance.

So, the long and the short of it is that I may be getting involved in some sort of “church” again. In fact, if I go ahead I’m being invited to come in as a member of the Core team planting this movement. No definite decisions as yet, but it’s a very obvious shake up of my way of life lately.

On a different topic. I’m just over half way through the Bible study I was asked to write for CoffeeBreak this season. We’ve already started doing the lessons despite it’s lack of completion, but I’m planning on having the last three lessons done in the next few weeks. I was looking over it and decided that maybe I’d offer it up to all of you, just in case someone was interested. (It’s a shame to do all that work and not get it into appreciative hands.) So, if you are interested in a bible study on Ladies of the Bible, you’ll find the first few files attached below, I’ll add the others in when they are complete (don’t worry, you’ll have enough lessons to get you that far). Feel free to download them, and print them off. All I ask is that you share your feedback with me – and if you share the lessons be sure to credit me. That way I can keep improving them for the next downloaders.

Finally, I have come to a decision. I’m going to close down this blog.

Don’t panic, I’m not quitting blogging (can you imagine? Who would I talk to?), instead I’m amalgamating Living Abundantly into Flaming Renaissance – one woman so only one blog. Up until now Living Abundantly has been my “personal” blog, my safe zone for being Christian and myself, but some work I’ve been doing on my business has brought to light the foolishness of this plan. (I shared the idea with Wakizashi and he just snorted, it seems he’s always been of the opinion that two blogs is stupid.)

So, over the next few weeks I’ll be transferring these posts onto Flaming Renaissance; I’ll slowly stop posting here and begin to post exclusively there. The idea being that the feel and content of both blogs wil survive on the one blog. So, if you link to Living Abundantly on your own blogs or sites, I’d really appreciate if you could transfer those links to Flaming Renaissance.

Here are the first four of eight lessons:
Ladies of the Bible Bible Study Files

These file are best viewed with the fonts Aardvark Bold and Edwardian Script ITC
Coverpage
Lesson 1- Lot’s Wife
Lesson 2 – Jochebed
Lesson 3 – Miriam
Lesson 4 – Pilate’s Wife & Huldah

My son has a new doctor (not the butthead guy I previously posted on) whom we were referred to because of his asthma (he’s been getting progressively worse over the last few years). He’s a specialist in asthma and allergies. Everytime I’m in his office I think if only I could capture an image in my mind he’d be the perfect fodder for a book character. It’s hard not to chuckle while talking to him.

Don’t get me wrong, he’s a great doctor. He’s good at his job, he’s polite and friendly, he listens, I trust him.

He’s an asian man, probably late 40s or early 50s, slightly balding, and all the hair on the top of his head is standing up. Straight up. I think he must rub the top of his head a lot. (It’s not short hair either.) He’s so abrupt, and seemingly forgetful. His talking pattern always makes me pause for a moment before answering. He’s not rude, just… different. He loves to use statements as questions. You’ll talk to him (in answer to a question) and he’ll look off into space thinking, then suddenly shoot off another aburpt statement-question.

Today the Kung Fu Master had X-rays of his sinus’ done. We waited and took them to the doctor. He looked at them (K.F.M. was pretty excited that he got to see his actual x-rays), talked to us, picked up the phone and announced into it, “I’ll bring them right over.” (Nothing else, just that.) Looked at me and said, “The radiologist wants to see your x-rays.” (What I can’t figure out is how that request came to him as there had been no outside contact since we’d handed him the x-rays besides the inexplicable phone call.) Then he begins to walk out of the room.

“We’ll take his x-rays. Follow me.” And he’s gone. He was a good halfway up the hall by the time KFM and I got our stuff together and out the office. I’m watching him walk ahead of me and can see that half of his doctor’s coat’s collar is tucked in under, the right half is folded down properly, but the other half is completely folded under. Which is when I noticed that his entire coat is askew. He seems to be oblivious to this.

He cracks jokes with the radiologist, repeats questions he’d asked in the office (which were questions he’d asked last appointment, but his secretary assures me he remembers appointments with clients from 17 years ago), hands us a second perscription and declares that he’ll see us in two months. He walks us out of the radiologists office, tells us to see his secretary and promptly walks the other way down the hallway. (Where was he going? His office was the opposite direction.)

I wonder what he’s like in his personal life? I told his secretary that he’d be the perfect model for the absent minded professor (except, she swears he’s not at all absent minded – she does agree that he’s very amusing). Needless to say, every appointment is entertaining, and it’s nice to walk out of a doctor’s office chuckling rather than swearing under my breath.

I wish I could introduce you, he’s definitely a guy worth meeting.

I’m having a very minor issue – my day is too full. I have two appointments that I have to keep this afternoon, and even though I have the morning to do other work I’m feeling slightly panicky and distracted. The reason is, of course, a buried concern that I’ll get absorbed in my work and miss an appointment – that I won’t be able to fit everything into my day. So, instead I went downstairs to have breakfast.

For the last few days my mind has been telling me that it would probably be a good idea to add a Weekly Goals list to my daily schedule system. The idea being that I can jot down any projects, appointments, or tasks I need to (or would like to) accomplish within the week. That way when I plan my days I can use that list to help me craft my daily To Dos.

Today, as I munched my peanut butter toast, I realized that the problem was I had scheduled in an impractical task for a day with so many timed commitments (i.e. I needed to be somewhere at a particular time). The task itself needs to be done, but it’s a time eater. It easily absorbs an hour more than you meant to spend on it. It really should have been scheduled on a light day or when I have no where to be in the afternoon.

Why then did I put it on my list for today, I wondered of myself. The short answer – I didn’t want to forget it. Right, says my mind again, a weekly list would have been helpful here. I wouldn’t have to worry about forgetting and I could pick and choose what day the task would suit. When I just try and plan my life, or work out a problem, within my head I end up without much more than stress and a stomach ache.

See, that’s the Hidden Power of Paper and a Pen – it takes the issue outside of my head. When it comes to issues like worries and forgetting writing things down is kind of like dumping your purse out on the table. You can see all the crap you’ve acquired (somehow), pick out the things you want to keep with you and leave the rest of the junk on the table (to be cleaned up by someone else I suppose). Writing down my To Do lists and goals and tasks is immensely powerful in my life. Nothing actually gets done, no change gets completed successfully, until I finally put pen to paper.

But, the Hidden Power is more than that. There’s something else. Something bigger and deeper than saying words out loud or thinking them over and over (both equally powerful activities). Yesterday, I journaled about something that’s been on my mind. It’s been weighing me down inside. Not a conscious worry or doubt, but something subtle that serves to nag and prick at me. Like a rock in your shoe, sometimes it’s off to the side, but swing your leg the wrong way and it slips under your heel or arch. I touch on it here and there in my morning pages (journaling), but yesterday it was really heavy inside of me and I was feeling desperate for an answer. Ready to take drastic measures (like start doing some research and reading – you know, actually act to find my solution).

I didn’t write it down and eventually work my way to an answer. No. Because the problem was that I had no internal answer. I needed help. (The prime issue revolved around a doubt of my own accuracy in my conclusions. I’m outside the norm in my thinking (depending on which peer group you are using as your basis for norm) and my mean little inner critic keep prodding me and telling me I’m wrong and trying to pile on the guilt. I needed something to say – it’s ok, you haven’t gotten lost. That kind of thing needs an outside prompt.) I just left all my worry and doubt on the page. I couldn’t afford to pick it back up, I needed to get on with my day, so I left it all dumped out for someone to clean up later.

Then, coincidentally (wink, wink), I realized during my reading time that I had forgotten I was reading a particular book (The Secret Message of Jesus – Mclaren) and decided to pick it back up (sometimes I read so many books at once I forget what I’m currently reading!). I started reading and Lo and Behold (I love that expression) I was suddenly reading comfort. Right there on the page an answer to the words I had left on yet another page, “It’s ok. You aren’t lost. You aren’t alone. You are on a good and solid track. You are getting it. Persevere.”

I pick up paper and pen, and put my mind, my heart down in ink, suddenly comfort, an answer, responds. it never fails. Not once. My life is easier, happier, the days seem to glide along peacefully, when I write things down. So, I’ve become convinced that there must be some hidden power in a piece of paper and a pen (haven’t you felt the magic in the stationary section as you touch the soft paper and admire the elaborate pens?). In and of themselves they just seem like normal everyday objects, but once I let ink run out and stain the paper… that’s when things begin to change.

This was the quote on my agenda page for today. How appropriate.

You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don’t try.
– Beverly Sills

(p.s. Did anyone else notice my header changed? I don’t know what happened, I’ll work on iguring out how to undo that.)

The other night I was lying in bed thinking about painting. I suddenly wondered whether I even knew how to paint! I was thinking about how long it had been since I had painted anything – busy-ness and illness took over my holidays and I’ve done nothing since the beginning of December. It has been so long that the idea of painting suddenly feels immensely foreign to me. I couldn’t see myself painting. I couldn’t figure out how to begin a painting, or stir up the energy I need to paint.

January is almost over and I feel so frustrated; being sick has kept me from accomplishing so much that I had hoped to do. I almost feel like my cold ate away at who I was. I’ve lost myself in sinus congestion.

The good news is that I’ve determined that the cold is finally leaving me. It started to drain out and feel different on Friday, I woke up Saturday morning with much of the pressure and pain gone, and today I’m still much improved. I’m slowly getting better. Which is a good thing.

It’s surprising though, how much something so simple can affect you. It’s not just the weeks of feeling sick and not like yourself (I’ve officially been knocked down for 17 days, it’s a long time), it’s the getting back up that is equally discouraging. Just thinking about all the energy it’s going to take to get back in the swing of things, to be chipper and happy, to sit down and paint a picture – thinking about it is exhausting.

All that momentum I had pushing me along is gone. I’ve got to not only get caught up on what I missed, but build my momentum back up so I can keep moving forward. Man, it’s no wonder we quit our diets, and exercise plans, and pushing after goals when we have one little set back. It’s not so much the set back as it is the effort of getting the motor back up to working speed again that’s discouraging.

As a form of exercise I really like weight machines and I recall my trainer telling me that the best way to lift weights is to do each lift slowly with a small pause in between. The reason is that lifting swiftly, and going just as quickly into the next lift takes advantage of your momentum. The power and motion from the last lift lends itself to the next one. It’s nice when you are tired (or just lazy), but it also takes some of the pressure off your muscle and tends to defeat the purpose of doing all those reps in the first place. Getting going again is like that: knowing you have five more to go and you have to lift all five of them by yourself without the aid of momentum.

On the other hand, the thought of letting myself drag my feet and having to try and get the momentum going after another week of delay is even more discouraging. Which is currently my motivation for getting back in the saddle now and not allowing myself to wallow in self-pity and overwhelm. Hey, it’s as good a reason as any.

On Flaming Renaissance: Friday Felicitations

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