Finally! My thoughts on The Missional Mom (part 1)

Here I go again, over thinking my response to a book, taking forever to post my thoughts.

Part of my problem is that I want to get it right. All the emotions that I feel over The Missional Mom – and there is a lot to sort through – I’m afraid to write anything. So I’m just going to jump in and hit publish. Forgive me if this is rather steam of conscienceness. I can’t write this any other way. . .

The Missional Mom (Living with Purpose at Home and in the World) by Helen Lee is a book I’ve been looking to read for a long time. I’ve been hungry for the message found in these pages years before Lee wrote her book.

My mothering right now is in a funny place.  My children need me; they don’t need me. It’s an odd place to be. My eldest will be 13 years old this summer. My youngest almost six; she’s getting good at making her own peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. There is still much to do here, but the hard work of caring for little babies and toddlers is over.

For a long time, I’ve looked at our days together, our homeschooling too, and wondered if there was something more I could be doing. And by more I mean doing for others in a meaningful way, things I can involve my children in as well, because I don’t want them growing up thinking being a Christian is mainly about going to church twice a week, AWANA club and saying grace at meals.

In all honesty, a lot of my Christian faith has taken on a ho-hum routine to it these past years and it’s a scary place to be. I never want to think of my faith in the Lord as boring or routine, but that’s what I’ve let it become. I know that’s my problem, not His lacking or unfaithfulness, but me being stuck in a spiritual rut.

Is any of this making any sense? Does anyone relate to what I’m saying? I’ve been a Christian for a long time and I know the correct answers for Sunday School. I can play the game.

Then I come up against a book like The Missional Mom and it makes me want to find my way back to a time when my faith was exciting and I did things. You know, those crazy things you would do because you just had to make your belief known to others around you no matter how crazy it made you look? Or you would go places and do things because you knew it mattered in the Kingdom of God?

I read The Missional Mom and it made me want to go places and do things again for the Lord. Of course, now I need get to do these things as a mom because that’s who I am and how can I leave my kids out when they need to understand Christianity beyond AWANA?

I want to be a mom who does exciting work for the Lord.

Is that bad, wanting the exciting? Life as a homeschooling, stay-at-home mom has a lot of mundane to it, don’t you think? But how would we recognize the wow if we didn’t have the dull? One of the things I appreciated about the book are all the mentions Lee gives to her own homeschooling and of other moms who successfully combined homeschooling and some sort of ministry.

Those are the moms I want to go back and re-read. If she can do it, why can’t I?

Don’t you love it when a book moves you to change?

Part 2 : Yet more thoughts on how this book has impacted my life, especially my approach to how I spend my time online.

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of The Missional Mom from the publisher in exchange for a review.

Don’t think so much, Monica

Dear Monica,

On Friday, you will travel by car, ferry and foot to attend the first Book Blogger Convention in the great City. The renowned Book Expo America will also be in the building; not sure you will have time to walk the floor there with all the other crazed book fans. I suspect you are going to have to chose between book blogging workshops and free books.

You better bring a tote bag.

I know you are nervous about going into the City. You are not a city person, as much as you would like to easily move between the two worlds of city and country. The crowds, the traffic, the amount of man-made material under your feet is not part of your daily life. You can count the number of cars that pass your house daily.

And I sense the heart of your apprehension, the “What if?” lurking in the back of your mind. This will be your first time in the City since that day when the towers came down and the City proved vulnerable to evil and the innocent fell from the sky.

You were a mom of only two then – a toddler girl, a baby boy. Today, you have four young ones at home and that toddler girl is now what they call a tween.

You’ve seen the City from a distance, from the safety of New Jersey soil, driven past the Manhattan skyline several times to visit the Statue of Liberty, a museum or to vacation further north. This time you will be walking the City streets, in a convention hall with scores of people. Your children will be with your mom and dad, enjoying time with Grandma and Poppy, happy to jump on the trampoline and eat numerous ice cream cones. Your mom is generous with the treats, isn’t she?

They won’t be anywhere near the City.

Your brother told you how he walked past that car bomb earlier this month. The bomb that didn’t work right, only filling the car with smoke to alert a pedestrian of the danger smoldering inside. He and and his friends left Yankee Stadium to go to dinner – his May Day birthday dinner – that night in Times Square.

We had to have walked past that car, he told you the next day. He told you the story and you immediately thought of the Book Bloggers Convention.

Don’t think so much, Monica.

Who would want to harm a bunch of book nerds? This is the world of publishing and book blogging, we are not sitting at the popular kids table in the high school cafeteria. Nobody is paying attention to the book geeks, right?

Right?

Friday is going to be a bright, bookish day. You are going to meet friends you have only talked with online for the first time, make new acquaintances, dwell in the world of book blogging all day. Maybe you can steal a few moments at the BEA convention floor.

I’m sure you’ll have a great time. Don’t forgot Who goes before you, surrounding you with His love.

Sincerely,

Me (or You, if you want to be more accurate)

Finding time to read

books-to-read2

Home schooling.

House keeping.

Church commitments.

Blogging.

Email, Facebook, Twitter, Ning groups, LOST (yeah! it’s back.)

With all of these good (and maybe not so good) things to do and occupy our time, how do you find the time and energy to read?

Seriously! I want to know. Because I’m having a hard time keeping up.

I remember back to my lazy college days of when I had an abundance of free time to just ignore the outside world and do nothing but read to my heart’s content. O, the amount of pages I could fly through! Of course, back then I was without household to manage, sans children and husband. I had oodles of free-reading time.

Life was lazy from one wonderful book to the next. Now, not so much.

My to-be-read book pile gets larger. My heart wants to read more. Yet daily life. . . and I like reading blogs, Twitter, and my love for LOST.

So.

How do you fit it all in? All the books, yet still manage to life a balanced life?