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Heads Up! Recommended Reading coming to – 1

Edit: This was supposed to be posted last night, but I had some intense disagreements with my computer. My husband had to mediate, and we finally came to a happy, working agreement this morning… So:

Heads Up! Recommended Reading coming today!

rreadinglogomed

Here’s the deal: I love reading. I love reading great blogs and articles online, and I adore (as in, extreme twitterpation and heart palpitation) a great book.
On the other hand, I despise wasting my time on sub-par writing of any kind. I find, however, it’s sometimes hard to put your finger on that great article or post or book or magazine you’re wanting, when you’re ready for your next great read.

Thus Recommended Reading is born.

Every Friday I’ll be posting a list of what I’ve read lately that (I think) is worth reading: books, blogs, and otherwise which I can whole-heartedly recommend to you.

I’m hoping some of you smart women will join with me and either put up a post or leave a comment with your own recommended reading, because, see, this is all kind of self-serving. I get kind of, uh, tense (hyperventilating, spasms, hives, stuff like that), when I don’t know what I’m going to read next. So if I can get some great recommendations, I can keep myself from those ugly little episodes.
I will thank you.
My whole family will thank you.

Tune in tomorrow later today for the first issue of Recommended Reading! I’ll include a Mr Linky so you can link up if you’ve written a post. And here’s a bloggie icon you can use to link back if you’d like.

rreadinglogoxsm

Happy Reading! See you tomorrow.

Wish I’d said that {03 June 09} 1

book1I think that having learned our letters we should read the best that is in literature, and not be forever repeating our a b abs, and words of one syllable, in the fourth or fifth classes, sitting on the lowest and foremost form all our lives. {Henry David Thoreau}

There is a great deal of difference between an eager man who wants to read a book and a tired man who wants a book to read.  {G.K. Chesterton}

The stories of childhood leave an indelible impression, and their author always has continue reading…

Notes on Joy Comments Off

I’ve been reading a book from our church library: How to Keep Your Joy by Paul Walker. Why? Because I like being happy.

Most of this is simply verbatim from the book, the parts that I want to remember, hold on to, let seep into my life…

Joy is affected by our vocabulary.

Our words (in order to promote joy) should

  • REFINE “no corrupt word”
  • RESPECT “lift up, raise up, bring into symmetry and balance; accept others as important in the image of God. Disrespectful, irreverent speech breeds guilt, fear, suspicion, and distrust.”
  • RELATE
  • REINFORCE “grace is positive reinforcement”
  • REFLECT “the image of Christ in what you say”

*Interesting to me that Walker is talking about how our words, which we speak TO others, have an effect not only on the ones who hear but on ourselves, the ones who speak. When we speak disrespectful, coarse words we make joy improbable (if not impossible) for others and for ourselves.

You have been taught by Him, as the truth is in Jesus: that you putoff, concerning your former conduct, the old man which grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, and be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and that you put on the new man which was created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness.” Ephesians4:21-22

Joy is affected by how we plan our priorities.

  1. Don’t get caught up in the stress of the times. Set priorities so that the positives – energized by the Spirit of Christ – counteract and control the negatives. Never surrender to the negative signs of the times.
  2. Seek what is TIMELESS: the kingdom of God and His righteousness. Seek means “to pursue actively”; we should be seeking to develop the highest that is in us, to live our lives in constant development of the spiritual nature that reflects the righteousness of God.
  3. Sort out the temporary influences that could hinder your joy, by placing persistent trust in an unfailing God. Take a timeless approach to temporary situations.
  4. Sanctify the tomorrows. “Therefore DO NOT WORRY ABOUT TOMORROW…” Worry = low-grade fear; opposing forces; negative thought patterns; torment, confusion, helplessness; indecision; physical stress. Set apart the tomorrows as holy, belonging to God. All we have is the now, and this now is to be lived out according to the highest priorities given to us by God in the fulfillment of the self.

Joy is affected by how we discipline our desires.

“…when our desires are unrestrained and out of focus, we lose our joy.”

We maintain joy by changing those behaviors that bring us sorrow, sadness, and difficulty. We make an intellectual-emotional-spiritual decision to function in a way that brings the highest productivity in our lives.

Joy is the result of self-control. Self-control comes from choice. Decide. Determine. Develop.

The key to determination is a sense of inner directedness that does not yield to the pressures of the age – that identifies with the highest rather than the lowest, the best rather than the worst, the ideal rather than the average, the excellent rather than the mediocre.

The determined life reaches for the deepest resources in Christ. Determination stands up and says, I’m taking charge of my life, my schedule, my attitudes, my responses, my behavior…I refuse to be immobilized by the lower nature and the works of the flesh.

PREACH IT, Paul Walker!

Joy is maintained (or destroyed) by the way we speak.

Joy is maintained by the way we plan our priorities.

Joy is maintained by the way we discipline our desires.

July Book-Blowout. You Needed Something To Do, Didn’t You? Comments Off

”Book I recently took on the Book Blow-Out challenge from Blue Archipelago. (Which is a great book review site, along with my other favorite, Book Reviews for Real People.)
I “joined” the challenge on July 8th, and just today (the 14th) I posted my reading list.
I’ve been working my way quickly through the first book, however: Emma Brown by Clare Boylan (and Charlotte Bronte). I’m about 2/3 of the way through; I took a nice break on Saturday morning while Marzipan and Wick were napping and Joe was at work. Me, comfy chair, cup of coffee with French Vanilla Creamer… and a good book.
I’ll post a review once I’ve finished it.
I love being a writer. It’s such a great excuse to read all the time. :)

Books Worth Reading: My Personal Standards Comments Off

retrowomanreading.jpgEveryone should read. Reading makes you a bigger, better person. I love reading, but I must confess that I am very particular about what I read. I have strict standards: continue reading…

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