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Grace for the Good Girl ~ Chapter 4 and 5

grace for the good girl by emily p. freeman

Last week I wrote about chapter 2 and 3 of Grace for the Good Girl.  This week, I’m in chapter 4 and 5.

Here are some quotes from chapter 4 and 5. (I’m reading in the Kindle app for iPad so no page numbers):

  • He was so accustomed to functioning in a culture of strength that he believed to seek advice for a mental ailment would be a threat to his career.
  • I can put a smile on my face no matter what. Most people don’t even know I deal with depression; most don’t know how severely it affects my life.
  • many good girls have a natural disposition of sweetness that can morph into a mask of false happiness and steal authentic joy that comes from the Lord.
  • We value harmony above our own opinions or emotions, and we smile and smooth over rather than risk disappointment or worse, rejection.
  • We insult the beauty of intimacy and sometimes even risk our own health for the sake of keeping everything fine.
  • In order for her to receive the gift of God’s unconditional love and acceptance for her, she had to come to a place of surrender and brokenness. She had to give up fine.
  • There is no place in the Bible where it says emotions are categorized as right or wrong. Still, for a good girl in hiding, it feels risky to be honest about them.
  • Sometimes it just takes too much energy to be authentic.
  • Trying not to experience the whole spectrum of emotions is like trying to be inhuman.
  • Our fluctuating humanness is there on purpose, to remind us of our need and draw us to the One who can meet it.
  • Maybe you can relate to feeling vanilla-grey, like your work is ordinary, or what you do is somehow not enough. Maybe you are haunted with whispers that challenge and threaten: The work you do isn’t very important. You are ordinary, less-than, and unnoticed.
  • Martha received the Lord joyfully, welcoming him with eagerness. Her motives started out right, as those of a good girl often do.
  • I see myself as irreplaceable when I think that the work won’t get done unless I do it. Instead of looking to him to provide what is needed, Martha rolled up her sleeves and took on responsibility for things that may never have been meant for her.
  • It isn’t that she wanted to be working. It’s that she thought she had to. She felt responsible.
  • Choosing to please God sounds right at first, but it so often leads to a performing life, a girl trying to become good, a lean-on-myself theology. If I am trying to please God, it is difficult to trust God. But when I trust God, pleasing him is automatic.

“How are you?”

Is that a real question?  You know what I mean.  It seems like more of a nicety than a sincere question.  So I default to “fine” and leave it at that.  Sometimes I’m too afraid to give the real answer and sometimes I don’t think the other person really want to hear the real answer.  I hide behind “fine.”

The truth?  I’m not fine.  I have minor chronic form of depression called dysthymia.  I’m not a chipper cheerful type.  And I never will be.  That’s just not who I am.  And I have to be ok with that.  But, I don’t have to suffer in the lows alone.  And neither do you.  I spent 31 days in October opening up about depression in hopes that it would help other women step out of that hiding too.  It all starts with letting go of “fine.”

Mary and Martha

Can I just say that I’ve never liked this story?  I don’t like it because I’m Martha.

There are stories and commands throughout the Bible that we are supposed to serve.  That’s what Martha was doing, but some how it got turned upside down and her priorities were all mixed up.

Serving can so easily turn into pleasing.  Before trusting, putting my best foot forward so someone has a good impression of me.  This turns into a vicious cycle of continually trying to perform so you feel like you can trust and be trusted.  And you can’t stop.

The truth is, there’s a place for serving and a place for resting and I can’t use either as a mask for trusting or being trusted.

Missed a week of the discussion?  You can start here for the whole series.

Momma Day By Daygrace for the good girl by emily p. freeman chatting at the sky

Seasons of a Mother’s Heart ~ Chapter 12

Seasons of a Mother's Heart Book Cover 

I’m linking up with Home with the Boys and reading Seasons of a Mother’s Heart by Sally Clarkson.   If you’d like to join in, here is the original post from Erin with the details and reading schedule.

  • … I am doing the will of God by choosing to homeschool my children, then I need to endure. … When I feel like giving up, I may think what I need is diving deliverance, when what I really need is endurance. pg. 223
  • I chose instead to endure the difficulties, not because I had to, but because I truly believed that I was doing God’s will and that God would reward my endurance.  I endured by faith. pg. 224
  • God has encouraged my through the years not to look at my children simply as they are at any point in time, but rather, in light of what God is making them. pg. 227
  • … make your priority whatever God is doing in your life right now. pg. 228
  • To perform one’s duty meant that I person did what he was supposed to do because it was the right thing to do, regardless of his feeling or the personal cost associated with that duty. … In a sense, endurance the duty of living by faith. pg. 230

Homeschooling is hard.  Did anyone tell you that before you started homeschooling?  Knowing how to homeschool is only part of the battle.  There’s opposition from the outside and the inside some days.

So, how do I get through the tough days?  I have to focus on what God has for me today.  Not tomorrow.  Not what He’s called someone else to do.  What has God called me to do today?  One day at a time.

If God has called you to homeschool, He has called you to endure to the end.  Homeschooling is marathon, not a sprint.  But, isn’t most of life like that?

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.   Hebrews 12:1-2

Before I know it, my boys will be graduating and off to do what God has called them to do and that depends on me running my race with endurance.

How do you endure?

Seasons of a Mother’s Heart ~ Chapter 11

Seasons of a Mother's Heart Book Cover 

I’m linking up with Home with the Boys and reading Seasons of a Mother’s Heart by Sally Clarkson.   If you’d like to join in, here is the original post from Erin with the details and reading schedule.

Some great quotes from chapter 11:

  • I need to look for God’s light when the darkness comes.  pg. 210
  • First, I must choose to faithfully depend on God.  Then, I must faithfully obey God.  Finally, I must faithfully wait on God.  pg. 211
  • … acknowledge that life is hard and sometimes sad and that we need God to make it through. pg. 211
  • Only God can strengthen you to do “all things” he has asked you to do as a homeschooling mom. pg. 212
  • Genuine faith is expressed in a believer’s life through obedience to God. pg. 213
  • … simply obey God’s word and let his Spirit change me through the circumstances. pg. 214
  • Obedience is rarely easy. pg. 214
  • In the Bible, waiting is often synonymous with hope. … It means looking ahead with eager anticipation, knowing that God will do something good. pg. 215

We all go through ups and downs emotionally.  Some downs are worse than others.  Sometimes it passes quickly. And sometimes it doesn’t pass so quickly.

Know that you’re not alone in dealing with these dark days or periods in your life.  Stay faithful to your calling from God.  Trust Him to guide you through it.  Reach out to family and friends to help you through.

If you think your lows are depression, get help.  I recently wrote a whole series on finding joy in depression and you might want to start there.  If you suffer with depression, reach out and share your story.

Seasons of a Mother’s Heart ~ Chapter 10

Seasons of a Mother's Heart Book Cover 

I’m linking up with Home with the Boys and reading Seasons of a Mother’s Heart by Sally Clarkson.   If you’d like to join in, here is the original post from Erin with the details and reading schedule.

Some of my favorite quotes from Chapter 10:

  • How they turn out will depend more on how much I prayed for them, how much I depended on God, rather than on how much I did for them. pg. 196
  • I cannot do it without God’s grace. pg. 196
  • Prayer is a means by which God releases more of his grace into my life.  Without prayer, I cut myself off from a major source of the grace of God. pg. 197
  • Only prayer that is “in the Spirit” will have power to defeat the enemy against whom I pray. pg. 198
  • My children need me to pray for them as they engage in their own spiritual battles. pg. 199
  • But prayer… it is never really finished. pg. 200

Sally’s words in this book have come to me like they are words straight from God… and it happened again this week.

Being a perfectionistic type A personality, I think I can do anything and that checking things off my to-do list is the top thing on my list of priorities.  {Want a wake up call on that one?  Read this from my friend Rebecca at Moms Mustard Seeds.}  I check off one thing just in time to have to do it again.  So many things to DO that I forget about what I need BE.  What my children need most from me is prayer, not all my running around doing.

First they need me to simply be praying so that I’m connected to God.  When I’m connected to God in prayer, I’m more understanding and gracious.  God gives me the grace I need to make it through each day.

Second, they need me praying for them.  Praying for their todays and their tomorrows.  It is my responsibility to be praying for their growth and protection.  No one else can pray like for them like their momma.  No one else can have that kind of understanding and determination in prayer for them except me.  Me.  Only me.

Stop making check marks.  Put the to do list down.  Make praying for your kids a priority.

How do you pray for your kids?  How do you make it a priority?

Seasons of a Mother’s Heart ~ Chapter 9

Seasons of a Mother's Heart Book Cover 

I’m linking up with Home with the Boys and reading Seasons of a Mother’s Heart by Sally Clarkson.   If you’d like to join in, here is the original post from Erin with the details and reading schedule.

Some of my favorite quotes from this chapter:

  • Discipleship is not just a formal, step-by-step procedure that our children that our children must perform; it is a natural, relational learning process.  pg. 167
  • {Personal relationship is…} a relationship that can move easily from facts and details to faith and feelings. pg. 169
  • Loving personal relationship would be the mark of true discipleship. pg. 169
  • I am convinced that God has built into the mother-child relationship much of the same dynamic seen in the relationship between Jesus and his disciples.  By God’s design, your children are meant to be with you. pg. 169
  • {Jesus’ three spiritual priorities with his disciples…} training them to minister, teaching them his truth, and modeling his life.  pg. 171
  • They need me to be there during the many teachable moments of each day, transforming them into discipling moments because of my spiritual inent for their lives. pg. 171
  • Discipleship is  life, not a lesson. pg. 174

The idea of discipling our children can seem overwhelming.  Many moms think that they aren’t qualified to disciple their children and try to turn that responsibility over to the church or try to use too many systems and curriculum to disciple their kids.

Discipleship is so much more simple than that.  It starts with being with your kids.  Simply loving them and having a relationship with them.  Then add turning the everyday things into spiritual lessons.  Then, live out your faith in front of them.

I don’t know about you, but I want to be the primary influence on my boys, along with Josh.  We want to be with them and teaching them rather than turning that over to someone else.  I’m so glad that I have the opportunity to be with them each day!

How do you disciple your kids?

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