Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts

Monday

Coming to an end...

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We're less than two weeks away from the end of Google Reader, and if you've been reading Pollywog Creek through a Google Reader subscription, I grieve at the thought of losing contact with you. If you haven't already moved your blog subscriptions to a new reader, I hope you'll do so soon, and that you will continue your subscription to Pollywog Creek.

An even better way to stay connected is through a free email subscription, and you can do so by signing up right here-----> Subscribe to Pollywog Creek by Email.  An email subscription makes it easy for you to interact with me by simply responding to the email you will receive with posts from Pollywog Creek either the day or the day after I publish them. I don't always remember or have time to respond to comments on the blog, but emails always get my attention.

I'm energized and refreshed from my short stay at the beach last week and I'm contemplating ways I can make it happen more often. The fresh summer air and cool breezes off the gulf seemed to clear out the cobwebs, and dozens of blog-worthy thoughts are now swirling about - but I'm pressed to finish working on our photos for the book today, so I'll have to hold onto those thoughts for another day and pray they don't fly away in the meantime. 

What do you do when you need to clean out the "attic" to make room for new and creative thoughts and ideas?

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Wednesday

Climbing Mt. Everest...

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It's been almost two years I've been living with this thorn in my side - and it's been a bit like mothering a baby. Just when you adjust to a baby's schedule and establish a routine, the baby's schedule changes and you lose your rhythm and you're back to making adjustments. 

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I'll say yes to projects and opportunities when rhythms are good and my schedule is open and then a string of not-so-great days makes following through feel like climbing Mt. Everest while life and responsibilities go on around me - and I'm constantly reminded of my weaknesses. 

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I'm moved along by the ebb and flow of hours and days and before I know it, weeks and months have passed without measurable progress on those projects and opportunities, and I realize that if that is going to change, then I'm the one who must make adjustments - because deadlines {and relationships} don't wait for my good days, they pass on by without me.

So, if you see me here less in my corners of cyberspace, don't worry that something's wrong - I just need to make those adjustments and establish new rhythms that I don't neglect what God has called me to do.

{Photos - one sweet magnolia blossom opening to her delightful fragrance here on Pollywog Creek; BTW - I've added new FREE photos to the Flickr set linked here.}


Saturday

Tweet, tweet...











Beware of hurry. Beholding glory begs for lingering. 
~ John Piper



Every once in a while, I wonder why I do any of this - blog, write on Facebook or tweet on Twitter.


Especially Twitter - what sometimes seems like a giant black hole - where my 140-characters-or-less are sucked into a deep, dark abyss the second they are posted.


Who cares (with the possible exception of my family and closest friends) what a want-to-be psalmist with a camera on Pollywog Creek in the Rural South has to say about anything anyway? (violins playing in the background)


If it weren't for the handful of perfectly delightful and lovely souls (you know who you are) who latch onto some of those sinking characters and engage me for a moment before they forever disappear, I'd shaken the dust off my twittering feet (or should I say fingers) and moved on long ago.


Today was one of those dust-shaking-off days - when I inched this close to calling my twittering days over.


Then my lovely and creative writer friend Heather Holleman posted Why I'm Now Using Twitter...


And I read Jeff Goins' Does Twitter Make You a Better Writer?"...


And John Piper tweeted that fabulous quote about not being in a hurry that I was so grateful to see...


And I remembered what I've known all along - that blogging, facebooking (?), twittering, and life never have been (or should be) about me.





"...whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."


Photos: Red-headed and red-bellied woodpeckers from my short walk around Pollywog Creek this July afternoon.

Friday

We don't have to do this alone...



We sat in the sunroom off the master bedroom while Joyce encouraged her mother to eat and I read a week’s worth of Marilyn’s emails aloud. Ninety-one year old Nanny frequently closed her eyes and shook her head, sweetly refusing the spoonfuls of soup and sips of water her daughter offered, but Joyce patiently persevered – gently coaxing her mother to eat as I read.

(read the rest here)

I'm guest blogging at (in)courage in the book club today.

Are you as amazed as I am that those beautiful, talented and creative young women let a gray-haired grandmother like me in the door? Just don't tell them about my frogs and gators, okay?

I hope you will join me over there and let me know you stopped by.

Monday

My turn...

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Though I should have been more intuitive and discerning weeks ago, when my doctor called to give me the results of my lab work, I wasn't all that surprised. "It certainly explains much," I told her, and she agreed.

I'd felt awful for months, but the last three or four had been particularly difficult. When you live with chronic pain, it can be difficult to recognize or assess new pain. I think that's part of what happened to me. Because I had learned to push past pain and couldn't bear the thought of disappointing loved ones who needed me, I minimized my current struggles. I was determined to endure. "My knees always hurt," I explained - limping out of the car, stiff and unsteady. "I just need to work out the kinks."

But the days passed and the kinks only worsened. A flight of stairs loomed before me like Mt. Everest every day, I coughed constantly, my hands and feet were swollen and painful, and I struggled to muster enough energy to drive to the store. I could barely write, even typing on the laptop was painful, and I couldn't lift my right arm high enough to dress without excruciating pain.



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Worst of all, mornings - those first delightful moments of every day I'd always greeted with joy when the house was still and quiet and sunlight blew out the darkness - became my daily dread.  Getting out of bed and down the stairs was an overwhelming obstacle that followed a less-than-restful sleep.

Though I tried to hide my discomfort, my stiff and gimpy gait betrayed me. I promised Louis that as soon as I was released from "mimi duty" I'd see the doctor, but one weekend when I was home, he caught me struggling to stand and unable to walk after getting out of bed. That's when he said, "No more."



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The days following Thanksgiving were clearly the worst. It was all I could do to move from the bed to the bathroom or a chair in the living room - a triangle of space within which I lived for days. For a few years, I have been delighted to be able to help an elderly disabled friend once a week with a few small chores, errands and other tasks she cannot safely accomplish alone or at all. Though she still needs help, she has improved considerably and no longer uses some of the handicap equipment she once needed. It was truly humbling for me to need to borrow some of that equipment now stored in her garage. 

For a variety of reasons, I decided to change primary doctors, and though it meant waiting until the first of December before I could see her, it was most likely one of the best decisions I could have made. She was very thorough, and though she carefully considered my past history, she examined me with a fresh perspective.

When she called to tell me the results of my lab work, I was not surprised. I had seen my orthopedic surgeon about my knees the same day I had blood work drawn, and I told him I suspected there was something systemic going on that was causing me such distress. We discussed at length the various options for treating my knees, but he agreed that I needed to be healthier before proceeding with anything more than a cortisone injection.

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"It's a bad disease, you know." The rheumatologist was kind, but honest. "The good news is that we know much more about how to treat rheumatoid arthritis today than when your mother was living."

My mother. Yes, my mother. I see my mother's face in mine when I look in the mirror, and for a moment it takes my breath away. The same hairline, brown eyes and pink cheeks.

"It's my turn," I tell myself and the image in the mirror, as if it really was my mother. "You always did tell me growing older wasn't for sissies."

It was no coincidence that I wrote this toward the end of summer. I believe it was prevenient grace - that it would soon be my turn to honor my mother's legacy and face the trials ahead of me with a merry heart and the grace and humor she sweetly displayed.





Pollywog Creek is not going to become a journal for my ongoing health issues.* Lord willing, I'll soon be back to those leisurely walks around the pond and down by the creek and through the pasture with my camera. After all, this life is not about me.

In fact, inspired by the penny royal I spotted growing along my neighbor's pasture, I felt well enough to slowly make my way through our pasture this weekend - where I delighted in warblers and rusty lyonia and the green that was sprouting through the frost-bitten grass. It was a sweet taste of God's goodness and grace.



For the LORD is good;
his steadfast love endures forever,
and his faithfulness to all generations.
~ Psalm 100:5 ESV




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Six day old Addisyn...



a grand afternoon
...and a grand afternoon.


*I'm going to chronicle this RA journey of mine in an invitation-only blog. If it is something you sincerely care to read or follow, just drop me an email at pollywogcreekporch(at)gmail(dot)com and I'll be more than happy to send you an invitation.

Saturday

Still here....

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To my faithful subscribers and those of you who keep stopping by, hoping for something new, thank you for your patience.

Pollywog Creek will be down for a few days and a much needed face-lift. (UPDATE: Guess I'm back up sooner than I thought, but please excuse the dust...we're still at work.)

Hopefully I'll be back up by Monday with a new, cleaner blog look, another peek at our new granddaughter, and a little insight into why I've been so quiet in this place.


Monday

Come sit a spell...



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Taking five minutes to wave from the banks of Pollywog Creek...

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Last week was a blur...

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Filled to the brim with an abundance of all things good...

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And an armload of challenges that has kept me on my knees...

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I promise I'll be back soon. In the meantime, feel free to sit a spell (there's a bench swing in the backyard) and wander through the archives.

Photos: A Sunday on Pollywog Creek

Sunday

Longing for simpler times?

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I’ve noticed that I’m not the only one that time and the brevity of it all has been a recent and recurrent thought. It must be the season. Little ones entering kindergarten, older children returning to school a year older and a grade closer to adulthood, and young adults heading off to college for the first time are all hallmarks that signal the passing of time. 

Many of us have also bemoaned the times in which we live and have longed for the simpler days of the past – days of horse and buggy and long, uninterrupted afternoons for tea and conversation without the trappings and distractions of our fast-paced communication age. I so enjoyed my facebook fast last week that I’m going to continue it every Wednesday – at least for now. One day a week without facebook, twitter, blog reader and the temptation to click through the links will be very good for me.
The leisurely pace of years past has it's merits, but those of us who have survived cancer or had life-saving surgeries or c-sections - with anesthesia and pain meds, I might add - are more than grateful for the medical advancements of our modern age that made those surgeries and treatments possible. Running water, air-conditioning, electric washing machines (and coffee grinders) are just a handful of conveniences atop my list of favorite indulgences that those horse and buggy days did not offer. It’s very good for me to remember that, as well.
Trusting God in all my ways means trusting that He allowed me to live here on earth at the perfect time in history for me – that I would not long for the past, but be grateful for the blessings of this age and use them not just for my benefit, but for the kingdom and His glory. Facebook, twitter, google reader, flickr and the innumerable internet resources available to me are not the problem – it’s how I might misuse them and waste time in so doing.
"...And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?

Savoring sweet sixty...

Pollywog Creek readers know how dreadful I am at receiving awards, and I fear that my reticence must make me seem dull and ingratious. The truth is that most of the time I honestly feel unworthy, especially compared to the talented, creative and beautiful young bloggers I read throughout the week. Despite my feelings of unworthiness, I have treasured the awards that have been sent my way over the years. I may have been shy to acknowledge them in a post, but your kindness toward me has been sweet encouragement.

Last week I received the following email...

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Congratulations! Every year Internet Café Devotions hosts Blessed Aroma, a call out to blog readers to nominate their favorite blogs, in specific categories, written by Christian Women. Those with the most nominations are compiled into a list that gives us the TOP 100 Christian Women’s blogs each year. Your blog was chosen this year in the category of: “Beautiful Cup Blog”. We hope this blesses you as much as you have blessed others!
A sweet blessing indeed. As I recently wrote a friend, I'll be celebrating my 60th birthday this year. Considering the alternative, I should be rejoicing, but I've been dragging myself through the mud this year...revisiting and lamenting old and new failures...and longing for more than one do-over.

The good news is that while I chose to wallow in the muck, God never released His grip on me. He moved me along when I wanted to quit. When I'd had enough, He pulled me out and gave me a new perspective for the days ahead.

The Blessed Aroma award comes just as I have been considering how I am going to use this new perspective here on Pollywog Creek, so in honor of my season of "Savoring Sweet Sixty", I'll keep the banner in my sidebar until my birthday celebration in May.

Do stop by the Internet Café Devotions, and visit the other TOP 100 Christian Women Blogs. Your words of encouragement will be a blessing, I know.
"For we are the aroma of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing" ~ 2 Corinthians 2:15

Tuesday

Something wonky....

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Something wonky has happened to my template, so it must be time to redecorate. Some time over the next few days I'm going to take the blog down until I can clean it up and straighten it out. Don't go away. I will be back when I have the wonkiness figured out.

Monday

Guess who's coming to dinner?

Chris Brauns, author of Unpacking Forgiveness, asked his favorite bloggers to briefly answer two questions for him: 

(1) Pretending that he and his wife Jamie were to take them and their date out for dinner at the restaurant of their choice, where would they like to eat?

(2) Other than the Lord Jesus, what two people from the Bible and their dates would they ask to join them?  

Chris posted the answers in his blog, A Brick in the Valley: here

The list of bloggers asked to participate included: Thabite Anyabwile of Pure Church Darryl Dash of http://www.dashhouse.com/ Kevin DeYoung of DeYoung, Restless, and Reformed Lig Duncan – First Pres in Jackson Andrew Ford of Triangular Christianity Gunny Hartmann of Semper Reformanda Patricia Hunter of Pollywog Creek (yep, that's me) Brian McLaughlin of Triangular Christianity Andy Naselli – Thoughts on Exegetical, Biblical, Historical, Systematic, and Practical Theology Dan Phillips of Biblical Christianity and Pyromaniacs Shannon Popkin – Tiny Paragraphs Owen Strachan Derek Thomas of Reformation 21 Mike Wittmer, author of Heaven is a Place on Earth and Don’t Stop Believing Zach Nielsen of Vitamin Z Amy Scott of Amy’s Humble Musings Excluding me, of course, Chris' list is an excellent one, and I'm definitely adding subscriptions to my reader for those I didn't already have. 

And Chris, this is for you...

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Wednesday

Wacky Wednesday...

There is a pizza place in our community that offers special "Wacky Wednesday" deals that are Hunter family favorites. Don't get your hopes up - I'm not offering any pizza deals this morning - but I do have a few links and quotes to pass your way that I think are special deals none the less. Sandy, thank you for this link. Beautiful song - a wonderful way for me to begin my morning in worship to my Father. I'll be singing that song all day. Chris Brauns is giving away 2 books and 2 daughters. That's right. If you don't believe me, go look. By the way, our small group is using his "Unpacking Forgiveness" for our weekly discussions. Talk about stimulating conversations! Good, good teachings that I wish I had received years ago. One night when Emily was about 4 or 5 years old I heard her sobbing in her bedroom after she had gone to bed. When I went in her room to comfort her she told me through tears that she didn't want to grow up and get married because it meant she would have to leave home. I thought about Emily's worries about getting married when I read Shannon Popkin's Cade's Wedding Plans this morning. Shannon is a gifted writer and speaker and I just know that you will want to add her new blog (tiny paragraphs) to your subscriptions. I must leave shortly for an appointment and there's not enough time for me to elaborate at the moment, but finding this from Dr. Mohler in my reader this morning made my heart race. It is my passion and my burden. It is the one place I know God has called me to use what ever gifts He has chosen to grant me, and I could use prayers that I will remain focused to the task. ("Do Not Cast Me Off in the Time of Old Age," Part One.) Lastly, two quotes that spoke to me this morning with links to the articles surrounding them:
"If people who don't personally know Christ, who have never been transformed by God's grace, have learned this much about giving, shouldn't we who are Christ's followers have learned a great deal more?" Randy Alcorn at Eternal Perspectives
"Only a Christian has a right to hope, for only he has the power of God to give substance to his hope." ~ A. W. Tozer (False Hope and Certain Hope)
Later...

Friday

It's a start...

...but first I want to give a big hug to my sweet friend Lizzie, who recently created the "Barnabas Award" and included Pollywog Creek in her inaugural list of recipients.

I am absolutely awful at receiving and passing on these lovely awards, and I fear that in my hesitancy to accept them, I've probably failed to acknowledge some of you that have so graciously sent one my way. If that is you, please accept my apology and know that I truly am humbled by your kindness. Lizzie is such a sweetheart and I am honored to be one of her encouragers. Please click on the banner to her blog above, visit her a while (I promise you will be blessed), pray for her and leave a note of encouragement - and if you do, please let me know and then grab that Barnabas Award from me to you. You may have noticed that I've added a few graphics and removed many of the sidebar links. I just get weary of seeing my face there and a cluttered sidebar and suspect that you must get weary of it all, too, so instead of doing laundry and cleaning my house this morning like a Proverbs 31 woman would do, I've been playing with my blog. Please be patient with me, because I'll probably play some more, now that I've finally (it only took four years) figured out how to make those links under the header - which I think are much neater than having a cluttered sidebar. I'll also be editing the pages that are linked to the graphics, as I have time. In the meantime, if you notice something that looks askew or find a broken link or your name was left off my blogroll (ESPECIALLY if you link to me).....PLEASE drop me an email (pollywogcreekporch (at) gmail (dot) com) so I can fix it.

Later....

Tuesday

That was hard...

That was hard. Don't you just hate having to make decisions? I'd much rather have a flower than a frog in my house (which reminds me of an incident that I'll tell you about in a minute), but as several of you indicated, the frog IS Pollywog Creek. I'll just have to surprise the rest of you more often with colorful flower photos in my posts. Deal?
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Tuesdays are often one of my busiest days - leaving little to no time for photography wanderings, but I happened to catch this male cardinal through a bedroom window this morning.
Can you tell how brown the grass is beyond the cardinal? Except for the winter grass that Louis planted close to the house, there is little that survived last week's hard frosts and freezes. On one of those cold mornings last week, I opened the front door and two little frogs like the one in my header photo fell into the house. They must have sought refuge from the cold in the tiny space between the top of the door and the frame. They just lay on their backs on the floor and didn't move, so I assumed that they were dead and that I could leave them there for a few minutes while I looked around outside. When I returned about fifteen minutes later, the frogs were no where to be found. Louis found one of them later that evening on the other side of the house. He said that they probably didn't move at first because they were too cold, but after they warmed up a little in the house, they hopped away. Don't tell Emily, but we never did find the other one.

Monday

Do y'all want the froggy back...

What do you think? Flower or froggy?

A few of my favorite things...

...from the past few days on Pollywog Creek.
Lichen - British Soldier This lichen growing on the wood fence posts is called cladonia cristatella or British Soldier. I'm fascinated by the various shapes and textures and the tiny red flowers.
Grapevine Leaves Mosaic The thickets near the creek are overflowing with grapevines. I'm particularly attracted to the way they cling with long red tendrils, the scalloped leaf edges, and the colors and textures of new growth.
High in the Sky I'm fully aware that not everyone has the same affection for the sweetgum trees that I do. The leaves are as brilliant in the fall as any we will ever have on Pollywog Creek. I even like the spiny seedpods and the way they hang from the bare winter branches. The goldfinches and other songbirds delight in the seeds before the pods fall to the ground and Gavin can collect them in a bucket. Gavin's "Ball" Collection
Flowers and critters Who doesn't like the promise of a rose bud and yellow wildflowers and gold sparkling dragonfly wings? And it wouldn't be Pollywog Creek without fox squirrels.
County Dock Sunset 2 A sabbath sunset near the point where Pollywog Creek flows into the Caloosahatchee River. I'm awe-struck every time. Can anything but Christ Himself be more glorious than the rising or setting of the sun?
I've been doing a little "blog-keeping" lately. A couple of my blogs have been like rooms in the house where the door has been closed and I'd forgotten what was in there, so I imported two of them - beautiful in its time and Project 365 - into this one, and eventually they will be deleted. Links to the imported posts from those blogs are in the sidebar. Our local crisis pregnancy ministry held a Walk for Life event this past Saturday. While everyone else was out walking, I stayed behind at the registration table and took photos of everything I could think of to pass the time until they returned - which is why there is a new "me" photo in the sidebar. My week is full of goodness. Today we were able to meet Casey long enough to give him a hug, some groceries, and chocolate cupcakes from Emily. The rest of the week is packed with "mission" opportunities, Bible study, doctor appointments (check-ups), lifegroup, my writer's group, a trip to Starbucks, lots of Gavin time (though its never enough), and planning for upcoming trips to Miami (for the Hillsong United conference with Emily), a Chris Tomlin concert in West Palm, a road trip to Gainesville, Atlanta, and Nashville, and finally a two-week stay in Texas when Austin is born - if the Lord wills it so. I told you it was full of goodness. What about you? What are some of your favorite scenes from recent days, and what goodness fills your week to come?

Friday

Pollywogs

When we were looking for a home to buy in this rural south Florida community nearly twenty years ago, a real estate agent introduced us to this property by telling us how charming she thought the street and creek names were. I was not impressed. To be honest, I was still digging in my heels about moving here to begin with, and there was very little, if anything, about the house that I liked. Louis, however, was totally enamoured with the property. He was convinced that a little acreage, a pond and a creek were the perfect place to raise our little boys. I suspect that he also envisioned that moving here would require the purchase of bigger and better power tools. He was right on both accounts.

After six months of living out of boxes in a disgusting rental home and not being able to find a home to buy, I surrendered, and we bought our little patch of earth on Pollywog Creek. The boys were thrilled, wasting no time finding the perfect spot to build "forts" and discovering favorite places along the creek to explore. They even swam in the pond, with it's mushy bottom. Not one to appreciate slime and dirt with the same enthusiasm, I watched from a distance and tossed them a bar of soap and the water hose when their adventures for the day had ceased. I knew that there were pollywogs in the pond, naturally, but I am more of the chrysalis/butterfly/flowers type, so I never encouraged the boys to remove the pollywogs from their habitat, where I figured the boys could watch them grow up to be frogs without bringing stinking pond water and other slimy, gooey stuff into the house.

A little more than two years ago, I noticed that people were coming to my blog looking for information about pollywogs. Some were looking for what to feed a pollywog. Others were looking for pictures. Quite obviously they were disappointed in their search engine for sending them here. I decided I should oblige them, but despite the efforts of the males in the family who have been willing to venture close enough to the pond to capture one, there hasn't been a visible pollywog here in a very long time. Until yesterday. The drought earlier this year left our pond lower than it has been in the years we have been here, and the dry bed lured me (and my camera) in for a closer look. I noticed that something was really stirring up the water...


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so I got closer...
 
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and closer to the edge of the pond...
 
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Pollywogs! A gazillion pollywogs! So to all those searching for pollywog pictures, I now have a page for Google to take you!
 
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Frog photos will obviously come later. How long does it take a pollywog to morph into a frog anyway?