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April 3, 2014 by Karin 4 Comments

Why We Have To Slow Down

We were still in the driveway when I crushed his little spirit.

Try as I did, or did not, I couldn’t contain the whipping lash of the tongue. And my 7-year-old crumbled.

We couldn’t be late, you see. He had to get that cavity filled. All he wanted was Lightning McQueen, but who really knows where in the mountain of matchbox Lightning would be?

I didn’t have time for that.

I drove on with my boy crying and his 9-year-old sister quietly coloring in the back. He should have known better. We had to go. No time for this.

Road ahead

It doesn’t take long. It happens quicker and quicker these days. No sooner have I pulled the lashing tongue back in my mouth, when my spirit begins to churn.

Why couldn’t I just let it go?

Why did I have to yell?

Why didn’t I just slow down for a minute?

We pressed on down the dirt-lined highways of this sprawling city. Cars rushing right and left.

Making the turn for the interstate, the chiming from the dashboard startled me.

The bright orange light flashed in my scowling face.

Empty.

Yep. Low on gas.

I merged our Madden cruiser onto the six lanes of asphalt and watched the numbers slowly tick down.

36 miles

35 miles

34 miles…

Low.

No more numbers guiding me now. Just a single message. Low.

I slowed the truck to a cruise and watched the cars race past us. Zipping in and out and far ahead. Everyone around us seemed to be living the same emergency, while we carried on with our Sunday-style grandma tour.

Riding the Steam Train

It was somewhere between billboards and casinos when I heard Him,

Slow down.

You’re missing it.

If you don’t slow down, you’ll reach… empty.

I exhaled as the line of cars continued to speed past us,

I am going too fast.

I hadn’t even stopped to notice.

His whisper came again,

Take your foot off the accelerator. You are burning your gas too fast.

Slow down and look around.

These moments will pass you by.

Roasting Marshmallows

Ducks by the pool

I watched as the world flew by and turned up our tunes.

Darling artist girl squealed,

I know that song! I love that song! We sang that at church!

My little Lightning lover grinned into my rear-view,

I know this song, too!

I winked and blew a kiss to the back. Then the thought,

What if we run out of gas before we get there?

And, why do I keep remembering the self-made emergencies, but I forget to stop worrying?

His voice interrupted,

There will be a place. Before you get there.

You have time.

We exited past the palm trees and headed toward the red-painted cliffs.

Red Rock

He paints straight lines on rocks scraping the sky, but we forget He has painted a path for us.

We rush and press our feet to the gas, while our tanks burn empty.

But we forget He walked, and veered, and slowed, and stopped – and changed the world.

It was there. On the left. Just before our final turn.

Fuel.

And enough time on the clock.

I filled our chariot as I pressed kisses against the window to the grinning face on the inside. Slowing down to see his blue eyes light with joy.

My heartbeat slowed…

my spirit pumped full again.

 

Ecclesiastes 4:4-6

And I saw that all labor and all achievement spring from man’s envy of his neighbor. This too is meaningless, a chasing after the wind. The fool folds his hands and ruins himself. Better one hand with tranquillity than two handfuls with toil and chasing after the wind.

Karin Madden

Filed Under: A Day in the Life, Faith, Motherhood, Patience Tagged With: Patience, running on low, slow down

March 17, 2014 by Karin 8 Comments

When A Lost Sheep Finds You

The wind was wild that day.

I scrambled and swerved trying to get the cart to the truck without losing the little ones in tow.  Only two today – piece of cake.  Two or six, it takes a squadron commander’s bellowing tone to force those littles into buckled seats.  I was too busy trying to grab the flying plastic bags to notice him as he got closer.

Excuse me, ma’am.

I startled as I turned my head to see him standing fifteen feet away.  His stance was awkward.  Unsure.  His eyes.  Pleading.  For a moment I’m sure I saw a glimpse of shame.

He held his hand up, palm facing me. This symbol of reassurance; he had no intention of coming closer,

I see you have kids there.

My eyes scanned the area.  People coming and going.  Just a middle-of-the-day parking lot.

I answered with words like a warning shot,

I have kids here.

He nodded and held his position,

I just wonder… I just need a couple of dollars.  I… we… need something to eat.  I don’t want to bother you.  It’ll take me all day to get enough together.

My mind retrieved the faces burned to memory.  The lady that one day.  And James.  And Jim.  The faces of desperate need etched in my mind.

I smiled at him,

I have something for you.

I reached into my wallet and pulled a bill large enough to feed him lunch for a week.  The “we” he was referring to?  I knew there was no “we.”  Just him.

Why do we do that?  Why do we think we are not enough?

Why do we think we aren’t valuable enough – just on our own?

His only hope for help was through someone, anyone, he could call “we.”  As if the only worthy souls were the ones in his imagination.  As if he needed to prove his desperation, need, and worth to this mom in a parking lot.

Lost Sheep

I walked toward him,

I have this for you.  You won’t have to do this all day.

His eyes widened,

Oh… wow.  Are you sure?

Yea, that whole thing about giving being better than receiving?  It’s true.  Every word.  It is better to give. 

His sheep are everywhere.  We live with them and pass them by day-in and day-out.  Sometimes we move on with laser focus and miss them as they stand back in distant fields.  We turn our eyes and our hearts the other way.  We build our fences and our walls, and wonder when someone will finally go out there and feed them.  All the while we have the food right in our hands…

Wild Donkeys

Wild Donkeys Together

I grinned and shook his hand,

Of course I’m sure.  God bless you.  What’s your name?

A smile lit his haggard face and showed the only two teeth he had left.  The shame vanished from his eyes as his posture relaxed,

I’m Ryan.  I just got out of prison.

The truth.  Funny how a step forward and a helping hand can chisel away at the facade.  The truth.  He told me his truth with a relieved sigh.

Need A Friend

I nodded and replied,

Our church has a great community re-entry program for people who just got out of prison.

His eyes lit with familiarity.  Head nodding vehemently, he went on,

What church do you go to?  Do you have a card for your church?  There were some guys… when I was in… they came to talk about God.  I lost the guy’s card.

Now that’s a thought.  I had never considered carrying church cards with me.

I gave him the address and the only names I could come up with,

I expect to see you there on Sunday, Ryan.

He grinned,

Yes.  Yes.  I want to thank you.  I know where it is.  I just want to thank you.

I closed the truck and continued to shoo kids into seats as he walked away.  This desperate soul who wanders parking lots looking for any sign of life.  This soul who thinks he isn’t enough to warrant a hand, or a heart.  This hungry soul searching to fill the empty places.

Little Sheep

He walked away, and as I watched the back of his casino jacket disappear into the sea of cars…

he looked an awful lot like a lost sheep.

 

Luke 15:4-7

“Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them. Doesn’t he leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’ I tell you that in the same way there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent.

Karin Madden

Filed Under: A Day in the Life, Compassion, Faith, Good Deeds, Mercy Tagged With: lost sheep, mercy for the broken, the value of one

March 13, 2014 by Karin 6 Comments

When You Are Tired Of Feeling Guilty

I only glanced into her eyes.

I wanted to get my eyes onto the new life she carried with her.

Sleeping soundly. That whole sleeping like a baby thing. The seasoned pros know what the novices learn quickly – sleeping like a baby is not sleeping at all. It’s a brief peace interrupted by the restless squirm of an empty tummy or a full diaper. Sleeping like a baby might as well be called sleepless in (name your city).

Light of the Moon

I hugged my friend’s neck as they made their way through the gauntlet of our home. Passing carefully booby-trapped areas of trains, dolls, cars, and random kid items lead to the safe haven of the back room. The den. I can manage to keep one safe zone at a time. This one place where foot injury by Lego is least likely. Only one zone at a time. Someday… someday we’ll be able to tread freely in our four walls. Truth? I dread that day.

I finally looked into her sweet mama eyes and saw this glimmer of a look that triggered a foggy memory. I knew that look. Almost like looking into a distant mirror. Funny how in a certain light we all look the same…

How are you? How has it been going?

She smiled and we exchanged the pleasantries. The joys of motherhood and the blessing of babies. The sweet smells of the miracle of newborn life. The beginning curve of the lips when we realize the smile looking into our eyes has nothing to do with gas. We ooh-ed and aah-ed at the precious pink package who lay soundly sleeping in her car seat.

How are you… really?

That familiar strain of her eyes caught my heart. Those memories of sleepless wonder and delirium woke the newborn mama corner of my mind.

Oh, I remember like it was yesterday. It’s hard, isn’t it? Brutal to be so tired.

She nodded and smiled,

It was a rough day yesterday. I’m just not myself. I’m just so tired.

I nodded and saw that familiar beast prowling around us,

Yea, and you feel guilty. Because you want to enjoy this more. But you can’t because you are just too exhausted.

Her eyes filled.

Mine filled in unison with my dear friend. Oh, this lie. It enrages me. This pure joy and mighty miracle of new life is snuffed with the tale that we should relish every minute. Capture every moment in gratitude. Hold every hallowed waking moment in the shrine of our thankful mother hearts. But, the truth? We are awake every waking moment. And it’s brutal. Our soldiers and warriors are trained to withstand the torture of crying babies. It is a form of torture – this listening to tender new life… cry.

Baby Hands

I looked into my sweet friend’s mother eyes,

You know, I remember after my fourth baby was born. My mother-in-law came to visit. She gave birth to and raised nine children. I told her I wanted so badly to enjoy this, but I was dying from exhaustion. What was wrong with me?

Her eyes fixed on mine and I went on,

She told me, “Oh, Karin, you want to survive this part. You’ll enjoy it soon.”

That was it. Off the hook. Guilt got a one-way ticket out.

My friend and I smiled as the relief released us both. Sometimes we have to hear it again. Sometimes we have to know the truth over and over again. Gratitude and joy can exist right in the middle of the blues – they might just appear cloudy for a while. And it’s all ok. Guilt is the lie. Guilt snarls,

You aren’t grateful enough. You don’t deserve this gift. You aren’t cut out for this. You are not enough.

And it’s a lie. You are enough.

You are enough when the new life enters this world.

You are enough when the toddlers scream and shriek and drive to you to madness – and your fifth cup of coffee.

You are enough when the attitudes grow in these young growing bodies – and you wish, for a second, they were little again.

You are enough when they grow up and grow out – and you wonder why you ever begrudged a moment of time with them.

You are enough – if you have never birthed life to another soul and you wonder why.

You are enough.  

You are enough in the middle of the messes, the mayhem, the fear, and the failures.

You are enough.  Because He is enough. 

And He hasn’t left us alone.  He’s walking us through the season.

Walk With Me

The guilt – it entangles us and we trudge along under its weight doing and trying. Doing and trying and plodding along with one good hand, while the other slowly goes to our throats and squeezes. Choking the love of life right out of us.

We are free. Free to bring our hands down from the self-choke hold. Free to breathe and behold the gifts in front of us – even in the weary moments. The guilt is a lie – the joy is real. Even under the fog of survival.

Baby Reading

The little one in the car seat began to stir. We crowded around as the new eyes flickered. She stretched her little arms toward the heavens as her baby blues opened.

These tiny arms opening up – to joy, to life – to the grateful gaze of her mother.

 

Hebrews 10:22-23

let us draw near to God with a sincere heart and with the full assurance that faith brings, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience and having our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.

Karin Madden

Filed Under: A Day in the Life, Faith, Friendship, Joy, Motherhood Tagged With: Mama of a newborn, sleepless nights, you are enough

March 5, 2014 by Karin 6 Comments

Why We Should Stop Trying So Hard

Try.

That’s what we are all taught.

Try your best. Try harder. Try to do it right the first time.

If at first you don’t succeed, try… try… again.

A good, valid lesson. I tell my kids to try. My parents told me to try. Teachers implored us,

Try.

We try day in and day out.

We try to get to those pink-rimmed toilets.

We try to get to all the laundry.

We try to get it all fluffed, folded, and put away.

We try to finish the first batch of dirty dishes before the second and third invade.

We try to plow through all the schoolwork without spraying harsh words… or tears.

We try to be nice to the road rage driver whose agenda is to get there first – wherever there is.

We try to keep our middle finger down and our attitudes up when we are peppered with salty words from a random grump having a random bad day in a random store.

We try to be patient with our kids, or our bosses, or our parents, or our spouses.

We try to be understanding with our aging parents even when we think we know what’s best for them… but they just won’t listen.

We try to love our neighbors… especially the unlovable ones.

We try to be the lovable neighbor, even when we don’t feel like it.

We try.  

We try to please others.  And, we try to please God.

We try to work this partially wrecked vehicle we are given to drive across this lifetime. We give thanks for the fuel in our engines and the gifts in the back seat. We give thanks for the passengers who ride this road along with us. We give thanks for the tune-ups and the brake jobs, and for the fine tuning along the way.

Racing Along

Little Racers

And we try to do it right, because we are grateful. Most of the time.

Sometimes we get distracted by the roadside stands or the flashy billboards.

Sometimes we completely lose track and another vehicle comes along and creams us.

Sometimes we thoughtlessly barrel into another unsuspecting driver.

Wrecked

And, we’re sorry. And we wish we could take it back.

But we can’t.

So we keep going.

We try until we find ourselves stranded on the roadside wondering where it all went wrong.

We wonder how we missed the turn, and where were the signs anyway?

We wonder why we stall and become overwhelmed and exhausted.

Because, after all, we’ve tried.

Tow Mater

Kneeling in this roadside place, I throw my spaghetti bowl mess of a mind up the heavens,

What do I do with all this?

This tangled, mangled mess of try-hard.

What do I do now?

And the flashes of light from the tow truck blind me. The One equipped to hitch us right up and tow us along while we sit shotgun. The whisper from this blinding flash in the darkest knee bent place blows through my weary spirit,

Stop trying so hard.

The clenched air exhales slowly from my worn and dented soul,

I want to do it right. I want to make You proud.

I want to make sure You keep loving me… well.

The Holy wind with His peaceful breeze washes over this weary traveller,

You don’t have to earn it.

It’s already in your hands.

The keys are yours for the taking.

Don’t try so hard.

I don’t know why. Sometimes we don’t know how to downshift. I don’t know where the lie started. This rumor that love has to be earned and tirelessly chased until caught. It’s a lie, you know.

One of our favorites. Yoda. He had it right,

Do or do not. There is no try.

Do ask.  Do seek.  Do knock.

Do remember the proof of Love allowed Himself to be hung on a cross for us more than two millennia ago.

Foot of the Cross

I wonder if it’s time to move from the foot of the cross… beyond the cross to the resurrected Love that beckons,

Follow me.

Love gave us life.  And breath.  And hope.  And no matter how hard we try or do not, Love is here to stay.

All we have to do… is be.  Be-lieve.

And, deep breath…

Be still.

 

Psalm 46:1, 10

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble…  

He says, “Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”  

Karin Madden

 

Filed Under: A Day in the Life, Faith, Grace, Hope Tagged With: be still, love is here to stay, stop trying so hard

February 28, 2014 by Karin 7 Comments

When You Hear The Nagging Voice

I did it again this morning.

I’m not much of a morning person. You would think after more than 12 years of early wake-ups, nightly wake-ups, all around the clock wake-ups… you’d think I’d be used to it. But, I’m not. I still love to sleep.

I keep hearing the whispers.

Get up. Meet with Me.

You see, I’m a night owl. The darkness intrudes, peace and quiet blankets the house, and I breathe. This is where I find the thoughts that linger and tuck themselves into crevices. This is where I hear His voice most clearly. In the peace.

Winter Evergreens

But the whispers keep nagging. Is is wrong to use that word? Nagging. It brings negative connotations, but it’s only nagging if you refuse to listen the first time.

And, I have refused to listen more than once. You know, the old yes-I-hear-You-but-let-me-think-about-it response.

The prodding and prompting crept into my ears again this morning.

Come to Me. Meet with Me.

My usual reply,

I will. Later. You know the kids are all up. I have so much to do.

He doesn’t let up.

Come to Me.

So, I did.

I went to the closet tucked away in the corner. Across the bedroom, through the bathroom, behind the piles of unfinished laundry and messes. I snuck away from the screeching ruckus below. I slid into the secret place and closed the door.

It was here, where He met me.

Walking to the sun

I closed my eyes. Sometimes we just don’t even know where to start. He knows this, you know.

I began to rattle the pounding of my heart – the thoughts that grab and choke me sometimes,

Please, keep them all safe.

Please, let us grow old.

Please, protect our health.

Please, surround us with your protective hedge.

Please, let it all work out.

Please, let these dreams in my mind come true.

Please, beat back the fears.

Please.

I turned my hands, palms up to the heavens. How do we will ourselves to be broken? And willing? And accepting? And open?

How do we take our hearts in our hands and offer them to the unseen Holy?

And then, the whisper… again.

Shh.

I stopped my rattling laundry list. I murmured only one more line to the Presence that surrounded me,

I don’t want to hear myself anymore. I’m tired of my own voice.

Please… let me hear You.

Walking with Daddy

And it’s here, in the silence, He answered,

I have only plans to prosper you.

My eyelids flickered,

Is that You?

We just aren’t sure sometimes. I needed more.

Is that You? Please give me something so I will know…

Again the whisper,

I have only plans to prosper you.

I needed the black and white. The words before my eyes.

Go to Jeremiah 29:11

I smiled in the dark recess of the hiding place,

Yes, I think that’s the one about calling to You and finding unsearchable things I do not know…

He must have laughed. That wasn’t at all what He was telling me.

Go to Jeremiah 29:11

I folded my hands as the sound of the wild rumpus below reached a crescendo. I walked into the light and picked up the pink leather gift my warrior and babies had given me years ago.

Pink Bible

 

Opening the tissue pages to Jeremiah 29:11, He spoke again,

For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.

You see, I had the address all wrong. I thought He was telling me something else entirely. Until I listened and went where He pointed. But, this wasn’t all He had to say. The real message was hidden behind the first step in obedience. The real words His voice urged me toward were the ones after this…

Then you will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. (Jeremiah 29:12-13)

And this is where He waits. In the quiet hidden recesses. In the words behind the first steps toward Him. In the depth of the heart that seeks Him.

Pink Blossoms

I thought I knew. The Holy hours of my choosing, the dark of night, the time when our home sleeps in peace. I thought these were the hours carved out for His Presence to speak. I thought I knew. But, I was wrong.

He calls us to Him at all hours. Through the light, the darkness, the messes, the chores, the ruckus, the peace, the worries, the fears, the busy to-dos of every moment. He calls to us, and He waits.

It’s when we hear the call, the whisper – when we answer with a bended knee, a bowed head, a willing heart – He lets us find Him.

It’s in this wondering if He’s there that He reminds us – He’s been waiting for us all along.

 

John 10:27

My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me.

Karin Madden

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Filed Under: Faith, Perseverance Tagged With: a willing heart, alone and praying in a closet, the nagging Voice

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Meet Karin

Hi! My name is Karin Madden. Writer. Warrior wife. Mom of six pack. Homeschooler. German-blooded southerner. Welcome to the place where I explore what it means to grow stronger - spirit, soul, and body. I write to inspire and encourage - to remind you we are not alone. By being bold with grace and speaking truth in love, we can become who we are meant to be. I'm glad you are here.

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