Sunday, February 28, 2016

Courtney Grager::Seeing Goodness

At our last meeting, we were grateful to hear from UPC's own Courtney Grager. She gifted us with her perspective on noticing goodness. As we ruminate on that practice this season, may we absorb her words and remember to focus on the goodness all around us.

Click HERE for the recording of Courtney's talk. And for those of you joining us from work and can't listen, a summary is included below. Enjoy!

Courtney focused her talk on "pennies from heaven"--paying attention to the goodness all around us.
...We all live hundred mile an hour lives. What does it take to slow you down?
...Describe a time in your life when you noticed God's goodness around you.
...Where did you see/hear/smell/taste/notice God today?

She drew attention to the power of our words. The words we use shape how we feel, think, and shape our souls. And it begs the question...
What words are you using? What's shaping your soul? 
  • Exhaustion?
  • Laundry?
  • Scarcity?
All of that is a very real part of our lives. There are hard parts that write the narrative of our days. Life is really hard, but God is really good. It's okay to have our heads down in this stage of life. But we can still notice goodness with our heads down.
It's all about habit. So we have to learn a new habit!
But we need structure and practice.

What new habit would you like to practice with your family?
  • paint/draw/sketch God's goodness around you...and share it with someone.
  • choose the scent of a candle that reminds you of God's goodness
  • marble jar--fill it with gratitude marbles
  • everyone says one food on their plate that they're grateful for
  • sing at the table--Johnny Appleseed, Doxology
It's not joy that makes us grateful, it's gratitude that makes us joyful.

You can find goodness even in the smallest things. So find a practice that works for you to help you spot it. And share it with those around you.

Reading List
Brene Brown: The Gifts of Imperfection: Rising Strong
Hugh Halter: Flesh
Rhoda Janzen: Mennonite, In a Little Black Dress; Does This Church Make Me Look Fat
Anne LaMott: Help, Thanks, Wow; Grace (Eventually); Stitches; Traveling Mercies
Brennan Manning: Ruthless Trust; A Glimpse of Jesus; The Relentless Tenderness of Jesus
Shauna Niequist: Bittersweet; Bread and Wine; Cold Tangerines
Henri Nouwen: Life of the Beloved; The Return of the Prodigal
Lauren Winner: Mudhouse Sabbath; Wearing God

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Tina Sellers:: Who's Got Time for Pleasure When You're Pooped + Knee-Deep in Poop?

I don't know about you, but from the minute Tina Sellers opened her mouth, I knew I wanted to listen. A gifted speaker, she spoke like we were chatting on her couch and just understood. Settle in for a recap and, if you're able, the whole of her talk.

Click HERE for the recording of this Lisa's talk. And for those of you joining us from work or with a toddler next to you, a summary is included below. Enjoy! 

"Just because something is NORMAL does not mean it is GOOD, HEALTHY, or in the BEST INTEREST of your marriage or family."

Tina began with slowing us down. She expected us to stop, to "challenge the tyranny of the urgent in our culture." It's placing inaccurate expectations on us, burning us out, and hurting our marriages. And then she posed the question: What comes to mind when you hear the word "pleasure?"
We answered...
  • laughter
  • no time
  • we're expected not to have it
  • husband!
  • fun
  • pressure (i.e. if you have free time for pleasure ever, MAKE THE MOST OF IT!)
Remember that pleasure and feeling is a gift. But women are getting talked out of it.
//How many of us are wasting it?

Men = respond to their needs/urges. They eat when they're hungry, pee when they need to pee, and seek out touch and intimacy when they need it.
Women = go go go. We're raised to be that way. We don't even recognize urges when we're feeling them. We run right through/past them.

The 5 T's of Pleasure
  1. Time:: You have to create it. You have to build it in. It will not happen on it's own. No alone time breeds alienation, resentment, and distance in our attached relationships (with our partners).
  2. Thinking::What thoughts are we having + how does that dictate the pleasure we're having? Your actions will go where your thoughts go! Do something playful. Tap into the spicy side of yourself--find her. She's in there.
  3. Talking::Have nourishing conversations. Sit across from each other and for 3 minutes each, finish the sentence "I love it when..." What is the nature of your conversations at home? Comfort? Nuture? How do we bring that back? How did we do it when we were dating? 
  4. Touch::IMPORTANT. If you're not touching, shut up and touch. Don't try to figure it out or analyze it. JUST DO IT. Try a 2-minute hug/kiss. Yes, it sounds like a long time, but it takes that long. Come together, embrace, drop your shoulders, sync your breathing, and then..."Oh, there you are." 75 seconds in, you're home. 
  5. Trysts:: Build in fun surprises for yourselves. Plan to leave home when you can so you're not looking at what needs to be done. Make it a priority to make space for fun activities to nourish yourself and your relationship with each other. It has to be intentional. It won't happen on its own. It will ALWAYS and FOREVER take intention!
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
       --Wild Geese by Mary Oliver

Exercise:Future Retrospective-- put yourself out 20 years, then look back. What memories do you want to make when your kids are 3, 6, 9, 11, etc.? How are you crafting that? Don't gauge anything by our culture--culture is just using and taking from you. What life are you making?

Added bonus of a healthy marriage: Kids learn best when they can see a marriage in front of them. Not just parents and "parenting," but an affectionate marriage. Being secure as a kid means being secure in a marriage as an adult. Make your kids look at you and think, "I want one of THOSE someday."

Tina closed with encouragement for all of use to BE BRAVE. Experiment. Practice. DO IT.  

Tina Schermer Sellers, PhD, LMFT

Resources
Come as You Are by Emily Nagoski
Sex Matters for Women by Sallie Foley
From Burned Out to Fired Up by Whitney Meade
Momifesto--A Manifesto of 9 Practices for Phenomenal Moms by Vikki Spencer
The Three Marriages--Reimagining Work, Self, and Relationship by David Whyte