Stay home. Keep connected. Create Solutions.

Please remember that social distancing does not mean social isolation! Fear is even more contagious than COVID-19, and fear’s goal is to divide & conquer us all.

So which of these approaches are you choosing in response to self-quarantine?

  1. Desperate times call for desperate measures,
  2. or desperate times call for innovative strategies?

More & more people are choosing #2. For that we are ever grateful. So much more productive than hoarding toilet paper, hmm?

  • Someone on social media noted that our entire country is in the midst of a massive experiment about working from home. Companies that would not consider that before are embracing the technology. I believe it will prove to be a lasting benefit for employees and employers alike.
  • For some, working at home just isn’t possible. So others, such as restaurant owners, are being highly creative, too. Even supporting one another to create curbside pickups at their competitors’ establishments. How cool is that?
  • I’ve been working at my home studio for more than a year now, offering TeleHealth instead of in-person counseling. But I started thinking about how I can provide more community support.

Then I remembered how I used to meet up with friends at our favorite coffee shop, where we’d share stories and concerns and hope. “Why not do that?” I reasoned.

So we’re launching Coffee & Conversation on Tuesday, March 24!

We’ll chat online (via my Zoom account) just like we would if we met at your favorite coffee shop!

To join us, just RSVP using the form on the right (or below if you’re on your mobile device), and I’ll see you there!

Can’t make it?

Contact me here & I will notify you when our next gathering will be.

How to Cope with Crisis

Have you ever wondered why some couples pull together during a crisis, whereas others are driven apart?

This video will help you discover ways to better face any crisis together.

Two are better than one,
because they have a good return for their labor:
If either of them falls down,
one can help the other up.
But pity anyone who falls
and has no one to help them up.
Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm.
But how can one keep warm alone?
Though one may be overpowered,
two can defend themselves.
A cord of three strands is not quickly broken. Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

4 Approaches to Love

4 approaches to loveWomen (and men) usually take one of 4 approaches to love. These patterns will, no doubt, sound familiar.

These three of the 4 approaches to love don’t work in the long run.

PLEASING (moving toward)

Of course, you want to please the one you love. I want to please my man, too. However, I know I need to maintain a balance, or we will both lose.

As as Christian wife who wanted to please her husband, I thought I was pretty good at that “submission” stuff in my first marriage, but I didn’t understand the whole equation.

My sense of self depended heavily upon whether or not my husband approved of me and/or what I did. He often didn’t. In fact, he didn’t seem to like me much. And I must admit, at that point, there wasn’t much I liked about myself.

My submission wasn’t by choice. It was rooted in my fear. Fear of displeasing my husband … and losing him. And because of my fear, I was never a truly confident woman. And I lost my husband.

CONTROLLING (moving against)

Many women I meet are good at that “strength” stuff in their marriages. But is that strength also rooted in fear?

Sometimes we toughen ourselves up to get through life, and we lose our true strength in the process. In other words, many women develop a false sense of strength as a defense against being hurt. But in the end, it causes them and their partners to experience unnecessary pain, and they both lose.

AVOIDING/IGNORING (moving away)

Is the opposite of fear actually love? Or is it indifference? Sometimes we build walls to protect ourselves from rejection or hurt. However, defensiveness simply doesn’t work in marriage. Ever. Because one partner’s defense will always cause the other partner pain and lead to more defensiveness. That’s what the Negative Cycle is all about.

NOTE: All three of the above approaches to love are based in fear.

Balanced & Beautiful (moving together)

The fourth approach is described in 1 CORiNTHiANS 13:4-8b. Its Foundation is built upon knowing you are already loved. By Jesus, Who is Love Himself.

  • Love is large & incredibly patient.
  • Love is gentle & consistently kind to all.
  • It refuses to be jealous when blessing comes to someone else.
  • Love does not brag about one’s achievements nor inflate its own importance.
  • Love does not traffic in shame & disrespect, nor selfishly seek its own honor.
  • Love is not easily irritated or quick to take offense.
  • Love joyfully celebrates honesty & finds no delight in what is wrong.
  • Love is a safe place of shelter, for it never stops believing the best for others.
  • Love never takes failure as defeat, for it never gives up.
  • Love never stops loving.

Love never brings fear, for fear is always related to punishment. But love’s perfection drives the fear of punishment far from our hearts. Whoever walks constantly afraid of punishment has not reached love’s perfection.1 JOHN 4:18, TPT

Man and woman are created as partners. Essential partners in the work of the Kingdom of God. Through Christ, we are redeemed to fulfill the purpose for which we were created. Man is the Leader, and woman is the Follower. He’s not a dictator, and she’s not a silent, powerless subject. She has way more power than she realizes, but more about that later.

Fortunately, as we get things back in their proper, Heavenly perspective, man has what he needs to do his job, to live out his life passionately doing what God designed him to do.

You can learn to love well. I’d love to help. Contact me here.