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Thankful in Everything

January 23, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Multitudes on Monday

There are piles of books on the floor, piles of clothes here and there, half-packed boxes mostly all in one place in our house, a host of things I don’t know what to do with, a giant stack of recycling and bags of things designated garbage; there is a to-do list a mile long. On Friday, we will move to my parents’ house, and in a matter of weeks or days, we’re still not sure which, we will board a plane and depart our country once again.

In the midst of it all, I am thankful–for big things and small.

21.  sunsets and sunrises
22.  my country
23.  my adopted country
24.  laughter in our home
25.  purpose–a reason to get up in the morning
26.  peace in the midst of chaos
27.  books
28.  quiet moments to read those books
29.  an end in sight
30.  financial blessings
31.  progress
32.  my husband–who else could I share this journey with?
33.  supportive family
34.  that I apparently haven’t forgotten too much Mandarin
35.  homeschool–it’ a distraction or a retreat from the packing!
36.  the satisfaction of ticking one more item off that to-do list
37.  early mornings
38.  praying friends
39.  vision to see a better day than today

For the most part, I’m thankful for the little things–the things we almost overlook. But there is one big thing I need to be thankful for today. Last week, someone called to say they wanted to give me their gently used MacBook Pro. It’s only two years old. My computer died last year, and since then I’ve been using an even older one we had been using for our kids for homeschool. In November, the screen died, and I’ve been chained to a borrowed monitor since then–not exactly a solution that will work to travel abroad with. Enter my benefactor with:

40.  a new-to-me MacBook Pro.

Thankfulness in the small things often means your heart is open to receive even bigger blessings. I choose to be grateful–even when it’s not obvious why I should be. But today, it happens to be obvious.

- Carey

 

January 3 in 30: Progress

January 22, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

3 in 30 buttonIt’s been a busy week, but I managed to stay mostly on track. I broke the going-to-bed rule a couple of times, but still managed to keep the days reasonably together. I’ve been kicking myself a little bit feeling like if I don’t demonstrate orderly routine to my kids that they won’t know how to get to work on time when they grow up. But then I get a dose of reality and realize our lives for the last few months have been a bit exceptional. We are in the midst of moving internationally, after all.

  1. Go to bed at 10:00. As I said, I transgressed a couple of times this week, but for the most part, I kept it together. Late nights or lazy disorganized mornings meant only three days of exercise this week, but I still ended the week lower on the scale, and feeling good about where my exercise is going. I’ve even been adding a new habit to my life: getting up even earlier to write at www.750words.com.
  2. Spend at least an hour a day purging and sorting. I am proud to say that there are areas on my desk where the surface is actually visible. I also deconstructed our homeschool space and sorted my summer clothing (the kids’ clothing is already sorted). I don’t think I’m being delusional when I report that we are more ready for this move than all the ones that have gone before it.
  3. Keep homeschool time sacred. This has been accomplished mostly by trimming homeschool time to the essentials two days a week, and keeping the other days focused. We touch every subject once a week, but not necessarily even every other day. I thought I would hate this, but turns out, we all LOVE it. We may be onto something here…

The end of January (and move #1–to my parents’ home) is looming close! How are you doing with your goals?
- Carey Clark

Stick with it Saturday

January 21, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Sam's NogginThis week, I allowed life to take over a bit. But I did manage to exercise three days. Admittedly, they weren’t the best workouts in the world. Twice, after missing my own exercise, I tried to squeeze it in later in the day–once with the kids as part of their homeschool time. (If I give a good effort, though, I still manage to work up a sweat):

Monday – One mile walk with kids
Tuesday – Tore the cellophane off that Turbo Jam video and did the Learn and Burn.
Thursday – Interval training on the mini-trampoline. These are definitely the most productive workouts. I should have done another one this morning, but I was just plain lazy. Not much more can be said about that.

I’m going to make a sincere effort to get back on track this week, but I’ve kicked the moving and packing into high gear so we can be moved out by the end of the week and clean the house top to bottom on Saturday, so I’m prepared that I may not always be in bed when I should and therefore not always up in time to exercise. I’m going to do my best.
- Carey Clark

The Importance of Vision

January 18, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

The Importance of VisionSome time ago, some blog friends introduced me to Pinterest. At first, I saw Pinterest as another tool to distract me, but recently I began to see possibilities.

When I dug into Tell Your Time by Amy Lynn Andrews at the beginning of the year, I began to think about being a dreamer. Andrews encourages people to think out their roles. And to all the ones that immediately spring to mind, she encourages the addition of one more: dreamer.

And I began to think: what are my dreams? Many have come true:

  • be a mommy
  • homeschool my kids
  • write a novel

That’s a pretty satisfying list right there. But I haven’t stopped dreaming.

The “experts” will tell you that a big part of making dreams come true is vision. You’ll never reach a goal if your sights aren’t set on it. I used to have a bulletin board where I’d post pictures of the things I dreamed about: a vision board. Some keep clippings in a folder or scrapbook. But since we’ve become a little nomadic, I haven’t had a place to put these things.

Enter Pinterest.

On a sudden burst of inspiration, I put together my own vision board.

Pinterest Vision Board
For a closer look, click on the image. What do you think?

Pinterest is also a great place to collect homeschool information. See my friend Sam’s great post on that subject.

To obtain a Pinterest account, you must first be invited. If you want an account, and don’t have one yet, I’ll gladly invite you. Simply click the contact button on the menu up there and send me a message asking for your invitation.

And keep those eyes on the prize.

- Carey Clark

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