Just Don’t OVER-Do It!

just-say-noToday is the first time in four months that I have been able to sit still, assemble my collected thoughts and put them on paper (or electronic device).  Considering the fact that I have a blog, albeit a grossly-unattended one, this is completely unacceptable.  Whether I write for profit, inspiration, or my own medication… I must write.   It is who I am.  It is what I do.   I am taking time for myself today, a proverbial “mental health day”, which actually benefits spirit, mind and body.

“You can’t pour from an empty cup.”
And He said to them, “Come aside by yourselves to a deserted place and rest awhile.”  For there were many coming and going, and they did not even have time to eat.  (Mark 6:31)

Life gets busy, and I have been busy;  but busy doing what?  I have been busy doing life:  working, cleaning, shopping, and balancing checkbooks.  I have been keeping check on neighbors, my car engine light, and my thyroid levels.  I vacuum almost every day due to  that loveable, 55-pound four-legged fur-ball we adopted, and my husband’s allergies.  They are completely worth it, but I applaud and give heartfelt thanks to my light-weight Oreck vacuum cleaner, and for Rosie, the Roomba-Robot.  I have apparently not, however, been busy enough dusting the furniture.  But I digress …

With a mere six weeks remaining in this calendar year, I reflect back on the past 11 months, and the promises I made to myself.  You know, those so-called resolutions we all make but seldom keep.  I have not gone to the gym as routinely as I intended, and not at all since early summer.  I have not yet designed new t-shirts for our ministry.  And I have not recorded the weekly videos for the ministry You-Tube channel, as intended.  I have not lost those last 15 pounds, nor have I abstained from all things sweet-n-starchy, as intended.  And I have not, alas, finished that third book I planned to publish by the end of this year, nor have I started it.  I am not lazy and I am not a failure.  I am overwhelmed.

Resolutions.  Plans.  Noble intentions.  We all have them as we should.  I believe it is imperative and healthy to “write the vision” and set new goals.  Taking on new challenges can be educational and rewarding.  But how about we take inventory of our lives and assess ourselves accordingly?  I recently did this (again), and hung my head in shame.  Or perhaps it was mere exhaustion, but my gaze was downcast nonetheless.  Not very fitting for a motivational/inspirational writer/preacher/teacher gal.

The above-stated inventory contains three unprofitable income stream attempts, 27 Facebook groups (four of which I moderate), and six Facebook pages to manage.  I have a stack of unread books by my “quiet-time” chair,  and random paperwork strewn across the “to be filed” corner of my desk.  I have furniture piled high in the garage waiting to be polished or painted for the “Robin’s Nest” booth.  Did I mention the used furniture/home decor store I opened in late summer?  Much of my free time has been spent in building and collecting that inventory, but that venture has been a pure joy and a fun hobby that my husband and I do together.  If we continue, it promises to be profitable for us and the ministry.  But it does take time.

Nike coined the phrase that has become the motivational mantra of our generation:  “Just Do It!”  The problem lies when we try to just do it all.  We often spread ourselves too thin with those resolutions, plans, good intentions and new ventures, leaving precious little time for the most important things:  1) Prayer/Spiritual life; 2) Family & Friends; 3) Physical/Mental Health; and 4) our true gifts and calling.

So after a night of prayerful reflection and meditation (I have become a chronic insomniac), I return to the resolution I made on January 1st of this year:  Prioritize.  Eliminate the things/activities that hinder the more important things.  Just say “no” to the unprofitable time-wasters.  Focus on my health, my family, and the work that God has called me to.  If it does not move me toward my goals, it has to go.  I must “just say ‘no’.”

In my first writing class nearly 30 years ago, the instructor emphasized this one thing that we should adhere to:  “Find what you do, and do it well.”  This will require pruning and just saying “no” to many things.  It will require consolidating and utilizing better time management.  It will require living everyday life with intent and purpose, and prayerful focus.  It will require simplifying and downsizing.  But I can do this.  We can do this.  We must do this, for our own sanity and sense of accomplishment.

Now, let’s just do it!

intention

A Vision of Vultures

vultures-circlingI had a strange dream the other night, which was more like a vision.  Looking out over my backyard, high above the tree line, was a circle of vultures against a bright, blue sky.  We see them occasionally here, and it usually means that something out there in the woods is dead.  I awoke and the Lord spoke to me ever so clearly.  In this vision, the dark vultures represented dark spirits, or the demonic host.  Daily they watch and circle, hovering over the unsaved souls of the earth, lost and dying in their sins.  They watch and wait, ready to devour each unbelieving and unsuspecting soul.  As soon as that poor lost one breathes his last earthly breath, they will dive in and grab hold, tormenting and picking him apart for all of eternity.

He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.  
(John 3:18)  

This vision and the revelation of its meaning was a vivid reminder of how urgently we must share the Good News of the life-saving Gospel of Jesus Christ!  It matters not who the person is, where they come from, or what they may have done.  We should pray and intercede for their salvation as urgently as we would pull them from a burning building!  Our hearts should ache for the lost, and our prayers should be that all will hear and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.

And anyone not found written in the Book of Life was cast into the lake of fire.  
(Revelation 20:15)

… to open their eyes, in order to turn them from darkness to light, and from the
power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an
inheritance among those who are sanctified by faith in Me. 

(Acts 26:18)

The image is dark and frightening, and we should be frightened for anyone who does not know Christ as his/her Lord and Savior.  But as long as there is breath, there is hope!  Pray for your lost loved ones, and rebuke the power and influence of the enemy over their lives in Jesus’ Name!  May the Holy Spirit draw them to Himself, to be forgiven, and to live with Him in paradise forever and ever!  

For whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.  
(Romans 10:13)