Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Goals
-Frank Lloyd Wright
Last Friday, Sam, Liz and I went on a little family outing to Lufkin. Liz needed to get some school clothes, I needed to go to Academy, and we all needed to just go out and play together. So we did. While she and Sam were in JC Penney looking at clothes, I wandered over to Borders bookstore. I love to read, but honestly, I think I love books more than I love reading. Does that make sense? I mean, I read a lot, but more than reading, I just love books. Anyway, I found one called "50/50" by a guy named Dean Karnazes. This guy is ridiculous. Men's Health called him the fittest man alive. He's the guy who ran on a tread mill over Times Square for 24 hours a few years ago. He's also run many "ultramarathons", races of 50, 100, or even more miles. The book I bought is the story of when he ran 50 marathons, in 50 states, on 50 consecutive days. Like I said- ridiculous.
At the end of last year, I became a runner. I did it for a few days, and quickly got hooked. It's fun, it's invigorating, it's great to finish and be able to say, "Man- I really just ran ___ miles." I did really well for about 4 months. I was running 3-5 days a week, doing as many as 6 miles, and even entered a 5k in January. My time wasn't great, but I did it. I accomplished a goal. It was awesome. But then, life happened.
In mid-February, we had a church retreat that took a lot of planning and preparation, so I missed a week of running. After that, my running partner was out of town, so 1 week became 2. 2 weeks quickly turned into 3, and now it's been 7 months since I last ran regularly. I hate that about myself. That's my pesonality. Make a commitment, do well with it for a while, lose motivation, just quit doing it.
Before we went to Lufkin, I had already decided that this week I was going to start running again, so when I found that book, it was just a little extra motivation. Sunday night, I sat down and typed out my running schedule. I printed it out and hung it on the fridge. Yesterday was day one, and I did it. Today's an off day, but tomorrow I'll be at the park again. I'm typing this post for two reasons. 1- accountability. I figure if I'm telling people that I'm running again, I've gotta do it. I have a goal and a date written on my schedule. On __/__/2010, I'm going to run __________. (I promise it's written on my schedule, I'll share it with you later.) 2- maybe my motivation will motivate someone else. Maybe you're like me- you know what you want to do, you just don't really feel like doing it. Well, I'm doing it, so you should, too. If my chunky rear can wake up early and go running, surely you can do whatever it is that you've been thinking about doing. Maybe it's not health related. Maybe your goals involve relationships, money, hobbies, whatever. Seriously, if I can do it, anybody can. I'm the world's worst at this sort of thing. In the immortal words of Rob Schneider, you can do it.
I'll update soon,
Jared
Dean Karnazes's website:
www.ultramarathonman.com
Other sites I'm reading a lot:
www.runnersworld.com
www.active.com
Monday, September 28, 2009
Your Faith: Compartmentalized or Complete?
The past several weeks Jared has been preaching a sermon series challenging us to evaluate what kind of faith we have. Last weeks sermon was titled Your faith: convenient or consistent? Yesterday's sermon was titled Your faith: compartmentalized or complete? Just like a waffle has different compartments sometimes we put our faith in the same arena. I'm afraid I'm guilty of this myself. Sometimes I'm only willing to give the Lord certain areas of my life. But the real convicting part of the whole sermon was boiled down into this one statement: "If you want God to bless ______, then you have to be willing to give God ________." We can't hold back parts of our lives from God. When God saved you and I, He saved us completely. Not just the cleaned up, Sunday morning best part. EVERY part. Since getting our hospital bills then having to get my wisdom teeth taken out and not being at work for the last 6 weeks, I've really been stressed out about our finances. But the Lord really showed me that I wasn't giving Him control. I was trying to figure things out on my own instead of trusting that God would provide. He does and He did.
Whatever is going on in your life, ask yourself the same thing. Am I giving this area to God or am I holding onto it for myself. God saved you through and through. I pray that would be an encouragement to you today.
~Elizabeth
Monday, September 21, 2009
I really should post more...
On the homefront, things are great. Sam is a good kid, and seriously has become the star of our house. We just love that boy. We spend a lot of time hanging out with him, playing with him, taking pictures of him. He's just great. And I think we've adjusted pretty well to the parenting thing. It definitely has been an adjustment, but we're doing really well. I like being a daddy more than I ever could have imagined I would.
In church world, things are also going really well. Peachtree is definitely not the same church it was when we first came here two years ago. Tonight, we had a get-together to kick off something we're doing called "100 Days of Praying for Your Marriage." We bought a bunch of couple's devotional books, and promoted it like crazy for about two months. We announced it every week, sent out invitations, made phone calls. Today, Cindy (our church secretary) and I decorated our fellowship hall. We bought a wedding cake, made punch, had candles, flowers- it really looked like a wedding reception. The whole thing is just to get married couples praying together. I honestly didn't know how many people would come. I knew we had done everything we could to advertise it, but you never know with this kind of stuff. Then, at the office today, I found out about several couples who definitely weren't coming. Some were out of town, some were sick, some were working, at least one said "We've been married a long time, we're doing ok. I don't think we need to go to that." So that was a little discouraging. 6:30 rolled around, and we had 20 couples there, which was way more than I expected. I honestly would have been very happy with 10 couples, but 20? I was through the roof. I know at some churches, 20 couples would be a small turnout, but we average about 100 people in Sunday morning worship at Peachtree, so to have 20 of our married couples show up and commit to 100 days of praying together- that's a huge deal. I am confident this is going to have a huge impact in our church, as well as in the marriages of those 40 people.
The lesson I learned? Expect great things from God. Emphasis on great. I am so guilty of expecting too little of God. I think sometimes I forget that He created the universe, and holds history in His hands. He spoke light and water and creation into being- and I expect 10 couples. He not only exceeded my expectations, He doubled them. So...
Expect great things from God,
Jared
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Stud Muffin!
~Elizabeth
Friday, September 18, 2009
Hollier Happenings
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Replay
I don't know who all reads our blog...but I bet at least one other person reading this does a replay like I do. I want to encourage you to see your replay moments as times when the Lord is trying to tell you something. Unfortunately I'm afraid the only time I am quiet and still enough to listen is when I'm trying to go to sleep.
Lord, help me to be still and listen. I know I can't do anything of worth without Your help and guidance. I need You, Jesus.
May you have a replay tonight.
~Elizabeth
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Happy Birthday Sam!
Our pictures that we went to take should be in next Tuesday. I'll post a couple for you guys to see. If you would like to see them all just send me a message and I can show you how you view them online. She did an absolutely amazing job! We had a very difficult time choosing which ones. I wish we could've bought them all! Well, that's it for now. Hope everyones having a smashing day.
~Elizabeth
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Nana and my "kinda sorta" twin sister's visit
Nana and Sam...he got LOTS of loving from her!
Aunt Lissa (my kinda sorta twin) and Sam...I think Sam was trying to figure out how our voices all sound alike. Kinda confusing at first!
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
1 Year Ago Today
It was a year ago today that my dad, Wallace Joseph Hollier, Jr, passed away after a long battle with cancer. I know a lot of people and a lot of obituaries say that someone "lost their battle with cancer," but I don't see it that way. When you end up where Dad is, and you're experiencing the things he's experiencing now, it doesn't seem right to call it a loss...
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Desperation
About 11 o'clock Sam wakes up...again. He's not hungry, dirty, etc. The list goes on. He's just fussy I guess. I tried to let him "cry it out"...which is the worst feeling in the world. After what I felt was long enough, I picked Sam up and began to try and console him. I did everything in my power to make him feel better and nothing worked. NOTHING. We rocked. We sang. We burped. "We" did everything mommy could possibly imagine to make him go back to sleep and stop fussing. By midnight, Sam was still awake...and "fussing" to say the least. Finally, I make my way into the living room and just about in tears I sit down in the glider and tell Sam (out loud in one of those quiver voices right before you start to bawl your eyes out) that I had done everything I knew to do and that I couldn't do anything else. I had nothing left to give him, so I guess he was just going to have to keep crying. After I get through with my whole spill, I look down and what do I see? My son... sleeping in my arms. SLEEPING! AMAZING. Who knew me pouring my soul out would be so soothing to him.
As I watched him sleep, the Lord revealed a lot about the relationship that He desires to have with me. When I realized that I couldn't do it on my own, when I was honest with where I stood with Sam, he finally went to sleep. And I was very happy about that. But the same is true for God. He wants us to come into a place where we realize that we can't do this thing called life without Him. When we finally give up trying things our way, realize that we have nothing to give, then He can begin to work. In the same way that I had desperation to figure out what was wrong with Sam and wanting so bad for someone to tell me what to do, God wants us to have that desperation and need for Him. He wants us to rely on Him for all our cares, worries, fears...everything. In that moment, when I felt like I had nothing left to give, God gave me a little glimpse inside His heart.
I'm praying that I would realize more each day how much I need God for everything. There is no way I can be a godly wife, mommy, teacher...whatever without His help. I hope you realize how much you need Him too. He's always waiting for you if you'll just call on Him.
~Elizabeth
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Pondering Moments
I really feel like I'm dealing with all of this so much right now. This whole idea of trust and submission is just stinkin' hard. Let's be honest. We like to do things our own way. We don't want anyone telling us what to do...even God sometimes. It's very easy to justify things in our own heads to defend the choices we make. For example, I would love to be able to stay home with Sam until he starts preschool, but that's not God telling me to do it, it's me just wanting to be home and not at school. In my head I have all my reasons to justify the decision, but at the end of the day when I really get real with God, I know what He wants me to do. He wants me to go back to school in 5 weeks. He wants me to love my kids at school like Jesus. He wants me to be able to help provide for my family so that we can bless others with what He's given us. He wants me to make wise choices. These choices all revolve around submission. Am I going to choose to submit my own will to God or to myself? My head says God, but my heart still has a long way to go. The whole point is to examine the choices we make in life, BEFORE we make them, and ask yourself this question: "Is this the wise thing for me to do right now?" Sometimes, making the wise choice isn't easy or fun. It certainly doesn't give you that warm fuzzy feeling either. Sometimes, you don't even see "results" until way later down the road, but I'd rather end up at a destination that I know God wants me at then a path that He doesn't want me at...even if it does take years to get there. I'd rather be able to work so that I can help save money for my son's college (which is insane to even think about at this point). That's a wise choice that God and I have made together. It's not easy, but I'm submitting to God and choosing to make choices that put me on a path that lead to a destination that is where I know God wants me to be.
Through dirty diapers and spit up, God is still in the business of speaking. I'm so thankful for that. Even in the midst of all that goes on throughout the day at the Hollier household, God is still moving and speaking.
Thank you, Lord.
~Elizabeth