Tuesday, January 15, 2013

7: Full Circle

The whole journey of 7: A Mutiny Against Excess, for us was not about following rules or depriving ourselves. It was truly a journey for us to identify what we wanted for our life and our family. It was a process of eliminating all of the daily noise and slowing down enough to think about what our family's vision for life is. What are we, the McMorrises, all about? What does our life say about us? 
Each of our families have a vision or mission statement, whether we have made it intentionally or not. How we spend our time and money, what we do, how we interact with the world and our neighbors, all of these things speak volumes about our values and priorities. Rather than throwing all of those things up in the air and letting them fall where they may, we engaged in this challenge to be absolutely intentional. 

Month one was food, as many of you remember. Dave was an absolute rockstar, and I failed in 2 days flat...possibly a day and a half, but who's counting?! I like to think that I still "got it" that month though. The purpose was to use those hunger pains as a reminder to be present with God. Taking our minds off of menu planning and deciding what to eat gave us that push to dedicate our meal times to being with God. I continued to do that...for month one and beyond. 

Years ago, I named this blog, and the description that I gave included a few words that have been critical to our lives. The first being "journey"...this is all a journey, and we are along for the ride. The second is "discerning God's will"...this is where we always wanted our family's mission and vision to begin. We believe that God created us and has a plan for us. We believe that following His plan is as close to heaven as we will get on earth. We can be very, very busy with "good" stuff, but if it is not the stuff that God has for us, then it is pointless. We end up running ourselves ragged and still frustrated that life is not what we want it to be. 
Month one got our attention and our focus straight. It had to begin with our focus on God. 

Month two was clothing...seven items of clothes for one month straight. I LOVED this month. I loved the tiny amount of laundry that it produced. I loved not having to decide what to wear. I loved not having to check that the kids were dressed appropriately. I LOVED having an excuse to wear my favorite sweatshirt every single day. I LOVED IT! 
You know what? Not a single person, in the entire 30 days said anything to me, Dave or to any of the kids about us wearing the same clothes over and over. The kids teachers didn't ask, no one seemed to give me funny looks. It didn't matter one bit. I thought for sure we would have to do some explaining, but no one ever asked. 

Following clothing came month three: eliminating "stuff" from our house, our bedrooms, our storage areas, our garage, everywhere! Again, a pretty fabulous month.

Aside from all that though, as month one cleared our minds to focus on God, months two and three gave us a physical clearing as we emptied our closets and house of so, so much unused, unneeded stuff. How ridiculous is it that having a full closet, and having a house full of junk for my kids brings me security? Please tell me I am not the only one. I feel like we are all alright as long as we have "stuff". Cleaning out our physical closets, again, brought our focus back to finding a true sense of security. It gave us space, helped us to make decisions based on practical need and not on emotional connection to "stuff". Anyone who has ever entered my Grandma Swanson's house will recognize how hard this was for me...it runs in the family. ;-)

Month four was media, and this month had the very greatest impact on us as a family. It's funny though. We really had to go through the other months in order to be ready for this one though. Dave and I had a focused vision on what this month would look like. Again, it wasn't about no TV, no electronics, no facebook...it was about making time for us to be engaged as a family. Not kids doing their thing and 2 busy parents doing their grown up stuff. It was about our family all being engaged in the same activity...and enjoying it. It was amazing. We truly made memories and were able to teach our kids some of our favorite games. Words can not explain how worth it that month of no media was. Our family was changed. Simply by moving all of the board games from a bedroom closet upstairs into the living room has made board games more of an option. There have been more than a handful of times since media month that I look around at the kids playing with Dave or me and I think to myself, "Yes. This is what I always wanted my family to be like. This is the vision that I had."

Month five decided to shoot for "7 acts of kindness every day". The kids each carried little notebooks to school with them and Dave and I each kept track of ways that we went out of our way to show kindness to someone. At dinner, we would all get to share our kindness stories. It was so fun to hear how the kids went looking for ways to be wonderful. A few times Chloe had forgotten to keep track during the day and found herself giving back rubs to the whole family just to "get her 7 done"!
When I told our small group that the theme for month 5 was Acts of Kindness, one dear friend, CoughAmandaCryerCoughCough, laughed at us...well, not really at us, but she did laugh. :) She said something like, "Really??The McMorrises need to come up with 7 acts of kindness. Don't you all live that already?"

And that is the moment when it all seemed to come full circle and I realized that we didn't need to jump right into a month six or seven. We do want to make at least "7 earth-friendly choices", that may come this spring when gardening and composting are easier to begin. But for now, God has grown us in amazing ways, and for that we will be thankful and we will rest. 

It is when our vision and our mission for our family and our lives become the stuff of regular everyday life that  we are living each moment intentionally in the center of God's will, and it is a blessed place to be for sure. 

Monday, January 14, 2013

Refresh

Dave and I were blessed to be able to get away for part of last weekend, and it was amazingly refreshing! It turns out that I still love my husband very, very much. That fact can get lost on me sometimes, when we are in the hustle and bustle of life.
We used to make a point to go on dates, but then, it only took a few HORRIBLE experiences for us to realize that we needed to be the ones in charge of our kids for awhile. Let me just say that no dinner or movie is worth coming home to nail polish on every surface of your home upstairs and downstairs. No quiet time alone is worth coming home to 6 kids hysterically crying about how they were wronged and how frustrated they are that a sibling wouldn't be obedient to a babysitter. It was rotten for us all, so we took a break from taking a break. Dave and I just alternated rather than going places together, and in retrospect, it was the right thing to do...for a season.
The past several months have been really, really good though. Medications have been changed for the better, emotions have calmed down, acting out has diminished, maturity has increased exponentially (for all of us!), and it was time to try again.
We are so incredibly blessed with so many friends who love our kids like their own. We chose 3 families for this overnight, but we were honestly overwhelmed by all of the options that we had. It turns out people truly are willing to walk this journey with us and love on our kids if just ask! So, Chloe and Wren went to Chloe's best friend's house, Halie and Jasmine went to our wonderful friend, Miss Brooke, and the boys went to Carter's Godmother's house.
I am typically not a nervous mom at all, but on Thursday evening as we prepared for the following day, I could not relax at all. I was anxious. Although I was confident in the love and ability of the people caring for our kids, I was also being bombarded with thoughts of the kids at their worst. I was terrified that the progress that I thought we had made as a family would not sustain our leaving for a night. I prayed. I prayed hard. I constantly had to remind myself that the voice of truth was not bringing these thoughts to my mind. I kept reminding myself that God loves my kids so much more than I could ever even imagine, and that He was in charge whether I was in the same town as them or a million miles away.
And guess what? It was a wonderful weekend for everyone. Not a single bad report. (insert happy dance)
Our kids were spoiled rotten. I am fairly certain that their diets contained nothing more than pizza, ice cream, waffles and toaster strudels. Every single child had a wonderful time, and some of them even brushed their teeth once or twice while we were away.
Dave and I had nearly 8 hours in driving time to talk about long term items that always seem to be low on the priority list when we crash on the couch to talk at night. We also attended a wonderful conference where we were encouraged in our faith and reminded of the power and vision that Gd has. The vision that He has is sooo not what we tend to see here on earth, and we need to be reminded of that fact often.
We met Jen Hatmaker, the author of the book, 7, which has led us over the past few months to identify and eliminate the excess in our lives. It was wonderful.