One More Giveaway~ The Fat Quarter Shop

 

My computer tells me that one of my five most frequently visited sites lately is  Fat Quarter Shop. Since I have yet to stitch a single quilt block, I thinks this speaks volumes about my tendency to research and obsess before jumping in to a new project! I have actually ordered from the good folks at  Fat Quarter Shop, most recently some darling Ruby Charm Pack squares to make a tiered skirt (perhaps I can show you that tomorrow). They were delivered to me quickly and I couldn't be happier with the service and general friendy helpfulness of the folks there. I've thoroughly enjoyed The Jolly Jabber, blog of Fat Quarter Shop owner Kimberly Jolly. It's especially fun to read Designer Tidbits  which offers interesting peeks into the lives and tastes of fabric designers or to click through the sidebar list of fabric designers' blogs.

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The Fat Quarter shop is offering a giveaway of a Home Sweet Home Quilt Kit. 

These colorful arrows will point you straight home! Quilt kit includes Home Sweet Home Quilt Pattern by Debbie Taylor for It's Sew Emma and Hometown fabric for the 65.5" x 87.5" quilt top and binding. A backing set is available separately.

I'm still in my learning-everything-I-can-before-take-the-plunge stage of quilting. If you are a quilter, give me your best advice; tell me about resources; leave me links. What's the best pattern for a beginner? Whose your favorite designer? Chat it up in the comment box. When you leave a comment, you will be entered for a chance at the giveaway. The winner will be announced next Monday! I'm really forward to talking a lot of quilt talk between now and then.

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Intentional Weekend: Liberate Yourself from E-slavery

"During the thousand years between the fall of Rome and the Renaissance, what defined human life in the Western world was the Christian religion. People’s daily actions and experiences aligned to the
liturgical calendar, which itself proceeded throughout the year in harmony with the rhythms of the natural world. People knew that this life was preparation for the next, but they also knew that this world was a part of the world to come...[Then] Human life no longer was informed at its center by worship of God but by worship of man...[Now,]...man has also passed and that the age in which we now live—The Age of Technology...In the process man has become a slave. C.S. Lewis called this “the abolition of man,” and his book thus titled explained how three technologies—the radio, the airplane, and the contraceptive pill—all promised greater freedom for mankind but instead became the means for a few to control the lives of the many. Lewis saw these inventions serving the designs of totalitarian regimes. Half a century later, many of us have of our own choosing surrendered our freedom to technology."

 

"Faithful Catholics see well enough the tyranny of technology in the wicked laboratories where human reproduction is torn asunder from human love. They recognize that the first device aimed at this end, the contraceptive pill, is the bastard offspring of the previous age’s two lies: the perfectibility of man (eugenics) and the total autonomy of man (unlimited sensual gratification without consequences). Where Catholics are less able—or less willing, perhaps—to see technology’s tendency to enslave is in the operation of the machines and systems of modern communication technology: computers, iPads, smartphones, e-mail, social-network pages, chat-rooms, blogs, Web forums, Twitter, the Internet, texting, and so on. We have given our lives over to these devices and habits. My colleague Aaron Wolf has coined a term for this condition: e-slavery."

"The story goes that when Evelyn Waugh at last succumbed to having a telephone installed in his home he answered it this way, “Is this an emergency? If not, write a letter!” None of us could get away with that now, but Waugh, even if he was not what we would call a “people person,” recognized the effect of communication technology on human relationships. It lowers discourse to the trivial.
Scroll through a day’s worth of teenage texting. Read the Tweets or blogs of those whose vanity has convinced them that the whole world is interested in their shopping and sexual habits. Watch the cell phones come out the moment your airplane lands, or read the posts on any Web forum. You will realize that, as Chesterton says, “[i]t is the beginning of all true criticism of our time to realize that it has really nothing to say, at the very moment when it has invented so tremendous a trumpet for saying it” (“The Proper View of Machines,” Illustrated London News, February 10, 1923)."

"“The impotence of the receptive party”: The phrase perfectly describes man’s servile relationship with the images and sounds of modern communication technology. Moving images so influence our lives that we conform our tastes, our clothes, our manners, and our behavior after that of our favorite stars. Some of us are perpetually starring in the movie about our own life, and our iPods provide the neverending soundtrack for this alternate reality."

"St. Augustine identified this human failing long ago, in Book Ten of his Confessions. He called it the lust of the eyes. Our desire to know about these things only drives us further from the divine because they crowd our imaginations when our imaginations should be filled with the contemplation of God. As long as I stay plugged into the noise, the flashing images, and the gossip, I do not risk facing the terrifying silence during which I would be forced to confront that which is most real—the state of my interior life. If my iPod headphones are blaring, I need not acknowledge the supplication of the beggar. If my iPod headphones are blaring, I will not recognize the beggar that is my soul."

Read the entire excellent esssay here and see what the author proposes instead of slavery to technology. I think a slow, thoughtful reading, pondering the message, praying about it, and then acting intentionally could truly be lifechanging.

As for me and my house, I think change could be a good thing.

A Giveaway on the Memorial of Padre Pio

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The generous and very talented folks at St. Luke's Brush have offered you a beautiful way to celebrate the feast today. This darling Padre Pio doll can be yours--leave a comment for a chance to win. Amy and Garry Brix of St. Luke's Brush have a special devotion to Padre Pio.  He has become a dear intercessor for their family in the last year and they're offering this darling way to introduce him to your children. Also, September 18th is the one year anniversary of the launch of their Etsy shop.So they are offering free shipping to their returning customers as a thank you for supporting this venture. They will honor that offer through September 30th. September 30th is also the date we'll announce the giveaway winner.

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Happy Feast! And remember, Padre Pio was a Capuchin. Cappucino is entirely appropriate today;-)! 

More thoughts on Padre Pio in our family here, here, here, and here.

God our Father, in Saint Pio you gave a light to your faithful people. You made him a pastor of the Church to feed your sheep with his word and to teach them by his example. Help us by his prayers to keep the faith he taught and follow the way of life he showed us. Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Introducing Rose Creek Cottage Jewelry~ and another great Giveaway!

 
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It's Generosity Week here In the Heart of my Home:-). I'm happy to have the privilege to introduce you to Carol Buehner, the lovely owner of Rose Creek Cottage, a beautifully crafted website that features her original jewelry designs. 

Carol is a creative soul who has poured her heart into her art since she was a little girl. As a little girl, she made good use of fabric in a home that was loved into being by her mother, a designer for Vogue dolls. That was her mother's first job. Her mother's last job was working with Carol on her widely distributed line of Ragamuffin dolls. The times in Carol's life that have been marked with profound sadness have also been the times when God has nudged her towards new creative pursuits. 

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She founded Rose Creek jewelry in 2002 and offers a wide selection of beautiful, meaningful jewelry created in her home studio at the edge of woods. I am so blessed to have had the opportunity to hear Carol's story. To me, her faithfulness and her ability to see the Creator's vision for her talent are a powerful witness.

Go visit Rose Creek Cottage. Have I mentioned that it's beautiful? Carol is offering you your choice of lovely jewelry, up to a $50 value. All you have to do is follow her blog (have I said how beautiful it is?) and follow her on Facebook and then come back here and leave a comment telling me you're a follower. You can also tell me what you liked over there, if you want to share. I'm definitely shopping at Rose Creek Cottage and pinning something that caught my eye to my Christmas wish list. I'll announce a winner next Thursday.

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10 Habits of Happy Mothers: Create a Healthier Relationship with Money

With the exception of the plum lipstick, I didn't really relate to this chapter all that much. Well, I guess there was this paragraph:

Have you ever walked into a friends' beautifully furnished home and found shoes lined up neatly in the mudroom, towels folded with only the rounded edges showing in the stack, and children playing quietly in the basement? In the moment, you feel wholly inadequate as a mom...

STOP. She's got me there. But she loses me in the next few lines.

The familiar bantering inside your mind quickly taunts you. "If you had this kind of money, my house would look like this and my kids would be happy."

Um. No. Actually that's not what I think. I think my kids are perfectly happy and altogether oblivious that my towels aren't turned the right way and our shoes are more often in a (very large) heap in the foyer. It has become painfully obvious to me lately I am the one bothered by asthetic imperfections. As long as the towels are clean, no one here really cares which way they turn. Except for me. I don't feel inadequate as a mom, I just feel all out of sorts and discouraged.

I guess money solves that problem if money buys you a cleaning lady to follow along behind you all day and straighten shoes and turn towels. But really, I don't for a moment think that will make my kids happier. Maybe I just know too many people in perfectly beautiful houses to think that beautiful house = happy. But really, I wouldn't mind that beautifully decorated and ordered home if I could have it with the things that truly make one happy;-)

I think I'm digressing...

Let's stick to the book and not worry about my laundry, neatly folded or otherwise. We're going to talk about three ways to create a healthier relationship with money. (Wait. May I digress just one more time? Do we really ever relate to money? I think relationships are with people, not objects.)

#1 Open your fist and grab someone’s hand—therein lies real security. Now we're talking. The narrow-minded pursuit of money isn't going to end well, even if you manage to get a lot of it. When our young adults are looking for guidance about education and career paths, we tell them to look towards doing what they love and that the money will follow. We don't tell them that they're going to get rich, necessarily, just that when we invest ourselves into those things about which we are truly passionate, about which we truly care, our work has meaning that supercedes its earning potential. And we remind them that ultimately a salary exists to support the family, not the other way around. The relationships with people are why we do what we do. Those passions and talents are most often God's way of getting our attention and pointing us to how He intends us to work for His kingdom.

#2 Ask yourself why you’re opening your wallet. I remember going shopping with a neighbor a day or two after Christmas one year. I usually don't really go out into the world during the holiday shopping season. Shopping isn't really the most fun thing a person can do when she is pretty much an introvert and goes no where without a double stroller and several children under ten. And that's where I was at the day I remember so clearly. But I went shopping, because we had a new bed and I had no sheets for it. There we were in a large bos store that sells linens and every random object ever advertised any where. I watched my friend pick up one thing after another and put them in her cart. It was just a few days after Christmas. She lived in a beautiful, well provisioned home. She hadn't needed anything when we left the neighborhood--she was just coming along for the ride and to help with the stroller and half dozen children. She was recently divorced and I knew money was tight and getting tighter. Finally, I could bear it no longer, "What are you doing? You don't need those things and once you get them home you're not likely to give any of them another thought." She stopped. Thought. Her eyes filled with tears. "Yeah. You're right. I guess I just keep thinking I'm going to find that magic thing that makes everything else all better." 

It's not in a big box store. 

We need to remember that we can't buy that one magic thing. And we need to teach our children that those magic things don't exist. We need them to not expect that their every material want will magically appear in their living rooms. We need to live like relationship (with God, with people--not with with things) is our first priority. They're watching. Do we model coveting or contentedness? Do we take our restless hearts to the mall or to the Lord?

#3  Look close to home for contentment—not to money.

Dr. Meeker writes, The wonderful thing for mothers is that we can train ourselves to have this same contentment.   It will never come if we continually look outward at the next thing we want to get. It will come   only if we acknowledge that we struggle in appreciating what is in front of us. It all goes back to that gratitude list doesn't? Can we be grateful for what we have? Can we look at the detail of every day and see God's generous provision?  I think we can.

What are your thoughts on money?

 

{{This post is the 9th in a series discussing The 10 Habits of Happy Mothers: Reclaiming our Passion, Purpose, and Sanity.}}

The rest of our discussions of  The 10 Habits of Happy Mothers: Reclaiming our Passion, Purpose, and Sanity can be found here. The first two conversations are 

Part 1(discussing Habit 1)

Part 2 (still discussing Habit 1)

Part 3 (still more on Habit 1)

Part 4 (Habit 2: key friendships)

Part 5 (Habit 2: your thoughts on friendship_

Part 6 (Habit 3: Value and Practice Faith)

Part 7(Habit 4: Say No to Competition)

Part 8 (Habit 4: Say No to Competition)