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she rises

Fremantle
Fremantle, 4th of July

One of my fondest memories from my childhood, was hearing my Mum tinkering away in the kitchen, waking us up slowly with her daily chores. Most mornings, as the cakes for her cafe baked in the quiet hours of the morning, the smell that filled our house was love coupled with hard work.

I was the worst at getting out of bed, but no matter how late we were, my Mum wooed me out of bed with our breakfast and often she just brought it to us in bed. Kisses, hugs, drinks, toast, she has always been a master of the morning. Some might say we were spoilt, but breakfast in bed was her slow way of awakening us to the day. A drink of orange juice, a plate with vegemite on toast, my Mum is a nurturer who lives her days serving others.

Proverbs 31: 15 says this about wisdom and a woman of worth…

She’s up before dawn, preparing breakfast for her family and organising her day.

I don’t know about you, but I am terrible at waking up. I stumble to the coffee machine, I throw the covers back over my head and I struggle.

One thing I am learning though, the way I start the day, really affects the way it finishes.

The more organised I am, the more I prepare, pray and begin in peace, the better my day goes all round.

My Mum, goes to mass every morning. She sits, she reflects, she meditates, she prays.

Before the light of morning has even risen, she has sat in reflection for a whole hour.

Wisdom comes in the light of reflection,

Wisdom is gained when we make time to let it surface,

and the way we begin every morning truly does change the tone of our day.

My Mum spends her day serving young men and women who are homeless, troubled, difficult and unsure. They only way she has the patience to serve and give endlessly is she rises with a sense of purpose and passion.

She is up early, expectant for the good she can do in the day.

She is waiting for the opportunity to help another.

She is far from retired, she is full of life, hope and endeavour

The main reason I believe that she contributes so effectively is that she rises with purpose.

She plans her days before most of us are even out of bed.

Then most days, she is carrying someone a cup of tea and beckoning them into the beauty of a life lived sown. One of the most inspiring things about my Mum, is that even when life knocks her down and she is tired, thinking she cannot give any more, once again she rises. Early, planning, thinking of ways to help another.

How are your days starting?

Let me tell you mine are far from perfect.

This winter, I am allowing the wisdom from proverbs to shape my days and the way I rise and get about my day makes a huge difference.

How about you?

Inspired,

(why don’t you post something about a woman of wisdom who inspires you and hashtag #inspire15 or my friends hashtag #inspiremyjuly)

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Day Five click here : She contributes

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she can do hard things…

Proverbs doing hard things

Proverb 31: 8-9

“Speak up for the people who have no voice, for the rights of all the down-and-outers.

Speak out for justice!

Stand up for the poor and destitute!”

One day as I lined up in ‘Subway’ to casually grab some lunch, the man in front of me was berating the girl serving us because they had a ‘change for good’ collection tin for an overseas charity. The funny part of the story, is the organisation that he was yelling about I was a part of. I knew the leaders, I knew where the money went, I saw the changed lives.

I stood behind him listening to his rant, how all this organisation wanted was people’s money and it never went to the people they promised to and how he couldn’t believe that Subway supported them. I had a brave choice. I either let the young girl tremble under the forced opinion and bullying of an older man or I spoke up.

Soon he had his sandwich in hand and turned to walk out, I said loudly (so the rest of the line could hear) “Excuse me sir, I work for the organisation you have a problem with can we step outside and have a chat. I can answer every question you have and also dispute the lies you have just been sharing.”

Gahhh.

What a scary moment. I could have stayed anonymous. I could have let that young girl shiver.

But I didn’t.

I wasn’t aggressive. I wasn’t defensive. I asked calmly if we could chat outside.

And that we did.

Have you ever been in a situation where someone is speaking badly about someone or something you love?

Have you ever been in a situation where you don’t want to step in but you know if you don’t the moment would have passed with injustice?

A woman of wisdom does hard things.

She calls the person whom she has offended.

She speaks on behalf of those who aren’t present.

But she does it with wisdom.

She is still kind.

She is full of grace.

But she does hard things.

The only way I had the confidence and courage to approach an angry man, is because I was sure of who I was and what I stood for. A woman of wisdom continually seeks confirmation of her identity from the right things and also reaffirms what it is that she stands for. I believed deeply in the vision and values of the organisation that was being slammed but also I knew the people personally who this man was criticising.

You too can do hard things.

I know you can.

What is something that needs to be addressed in this season?

I truly believe you can do hard things…

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Day four click here: She rises

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she finds focus

focus

Just this last Sunday, my husband and I were sitting in church and as I listened (intently, of course) he leaned over and whispered, “I think we have both become a little ADHD.”

I smiled, but I knew what he was referring too. We were both sitting listening to the sermon, flicking between instagram, facebook, smiling at a friend three rows away, checking the news on twitter and of course listening to the speaker (intently, of course). My husband is in the midst of launching a new not for profit business, on top of his full time job, I have my hands in a few big, juicy pies and we live distracted.

We want to work hard and live a life of contribution but at the same time we just don’t want to be those people who are a bit of everything, but masters of none. I know that women are supposed to be better multi-taskers but I am realising I can do a few things okay or I can truly focus and do one thing well.

Proverb 4: 25 Keep your eyes focused on what is right, and look straight ahead to what is good.

How focused do you feel at the moment?

What helps you to decide what you need to give your attention to?

“You can do two things at once, but you can’t focus effectively on two things at once.” Gary Keller

Wisdom calls us to focus on that which is in our hand and look intently at the opportunities in the future. To live a life of influence, it means we do stretch and we do give significantly and there are seasons of carrying responsibility intensely but there are times that we need to actively focus on the now.

We can spend all our time in our head in the future, we can spend all our energy on the past, but a woman of wisdom focusses on the days in front of her and peacefully leans into their potential.

If you are sitting at the dinner table with a  group of friends or family, put your phone away.

If you are in an auditorium listening to a speaker, lean in and put your distractions away.

If you are in a conversation with someone listen to them before you spend time planning on what your reply is.

Focus.

A woman of wisdom, learns to live focused.

Deep breath, this is the kind of person I want to become.

How about you?

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To read Day Three click here: She can do hard things

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she is kind

kind

 

Proverb Eighteen;

2 Fools care nothing for thoughtful discourse;
    all they do is run off at the mouth.

When wickedness arrives, shame’s not far behind;
    contempt for life is contemptible.

Many words rush along like rivers in flood,
    but deep wisdom flows up from artesian springs.

Social media and it’s online culture has been overwhelming me lately. To the point where I have considered carefully what I want to say and where I need to stay actively silent, not necessarily because I agree or disagree, but I refuse to debate in a forum that is so destructive.

Words.

They are so powerful.

The wisest women I know are measured by their words.

I am a verbal processor. I normally find my answers mid conversation or mid page of journalling. I process, I think, I debate, I discuss, I listen and I am enamoured with words.

Lately I have been learning however, the more I speak, the more I write, the more I am accountable to the weight of my words.

Whether we type them, speak them or text them, every word we form has power.

Do your words rush out like an out of control flooding river?

Or do they well up like an artisan spring filtered with layer upon layer of wisdom.

The more I see people shout from their keyboards, the more I wonder if they would say the same thing if they were seated on a platform in front of thousands. There is nothing like a crowd, a pulpit or a platform that helps us distill the depth and passion of our opinions.

How easy is it to debate online passionately, then when we see that person in flesh we shrink away with not much to say?

Kindness;

It is an ethical disposition, that asks us to place ourselves in the shoes of another before we act or speak.

What if kindness became the filter before we responded?

What if we were known by our words and how kind they were to another?

Kindness doesn’t mean we water down the truth, in fact the kindest thing we can do often is speak the truth, but filtered with wisdom.

I honestly don’t judge people by the percentage that we disagree on, but by the smaller percentage of what we do agree upon.

Proverb 31 is forming my devotional every day of July says this…

When she speaks she has something worthwhile to say, and she always says it kindly.

My goal this July, is to measure my words by this filter of wisdom.

1) Is what I am saying worthwhile?

2) Am I being kind?

If only we all stopped before we spoke, I believe the world would be a much healthier place.

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To read Day Two click here: She Finds Focus

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Re-calibrating my annual goals with four simple questions.

  

June is closing and it marks the half way point to our year. 

Lately I have been like a big Mumma Bear who has fallen asleep. My babe has come through a big season of teething and I have been catching up on broken sleep in the winter sun.

As I have been knitting and been crafting away, I have been thinking deeply about my life and the goals I set at the beginning of this year. It doesn’t matter how big and hairy a goal is, or as simple as a daily goal to shift perspective, unless we take time to recalibrate, the busyness of the year takes over and we feel frustrated once again as our list remains unfulfilled.

One month of eating whole foods and I have dropped seven kilos, which was my big, audacious goal this year. I also sent my manuscript to an editor in London and am eagerly awaiting its return. I also sent my manuscript out to a group of single girls to give me feedback and I cant wait to rewrite parts of my book so I can bring my very best to this piece of work.

All of these little incremental changes are not very inspiring. Each kilo lost, hasn’t been instagram worthy or facebookable, but as they come together to bring change, the wins feel significant.

On Saturday, as my friend Penny spoke about Wellness and setting goals in all areas of our health, soul and body, I recalibrated those important decisions I made at the beginning of the year and wrote myself a little list of questions per goal, to help me move slowly towards change.

Here is what I wrote…

1) I wrote the goal, plain and clear. Unless we are able to clearly articulate where we need change, the change will never occur.

2) I wrote the why of that goal. What was it that motivated me at the beginning of 2015 to bring change to this area.

3) I wrote who was in my circle of influence that can help me with that goal. From accouontability, to doing it with me, to just plain old encouragement.

4) I wrote the obstacles in my way to achieving that goal.

As simple as these four questions are, they have recalibrated my inspiration to achieve the things I set out to achieve this year.

How about you?

What do you really want to change this year?

Did you write out my annual New Years Reflection Goals?  If so, why not pull them out and have a read and recalibrate what it is that you want to achieve this year. 

If not, why not print it out and do them for the 2015/ 16 financial year?

Then, why not answer these four questions about your goals?

Simple but profound.

I am soldiering on with my goals this year, how about you?

Amanda Viviers