Tag Archives: Homestead

The Paralysis of Beginning

0
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Home.Food.Garden, Thoughts on life

We’ve been home for a week.  During this time we’ve had our first taste of summer – literally. We have started harvesting cucumbers, zucchini, just a couple handfuls of raspberries and tomatoes, and, wait for it, two blueberries! Jam making has commenced as well: Apricot, Vanilla, White Wine and Strawberry Thai Herb.  Our lovely and creative housemate, Beth, helped with these and now we take a breather before this weekend’s Plum Cardamom followed by a Tomato Sauce Extravaganza in a couple weeks.

Part of me longs to bake, dig, and organize – engage my hands and senses, leaving my academic side out of it.  Already, a whole new set of shelves were installed under our stairs. The space wasn’t being used efficiently, so my activator/achiever strengths kicked in and voila, more storage.

 

It is a wonderful way to tune into summer: Sweating over a stove at 10 o’clock at night just like both of my grandmothers once did a generation ago.  Not sure if they would’ve had the wine glass in hand, nevertheless, there is something calling me to this.

 

 

However, there is also something hastily beckoning me to Fall – to read textbooks, plan syllabi, and create lessons and assignments that are engaging and relevant. When I got home part of me longed to dive in but I just couldn’t start, not even on jam. Read More »

Savoring Summer

0
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Art Journaling, Home.Food.Garden, Workshops/Retreats

Summer is here.

The corn reminds me every morning by growing inches each day, just soaking up the heat. Likewise, the tomato garden on the other side of the yard is not complaining.

That’s a good thing because we are about to leave for a week of contemplative prayer and no technology – therefore, no blogging.  A week of slowing down, savoring life as only one can when disconnected from all things savvy.

So I wanted to show pictures of the garden before we leave so I can see how much it grows while were gone.  And to update you on its progress since I posted not too long ago about the adventure of homesteading we embarked on a couple of years ago.  It has been great hearing about what all of you are growing and getting encouragement too.

I hope to come back from this retreat rejuvenated for this new season with lots of inspiration, love and energy for what is ahead.  I am working on quite a bit of new material and (drum roll) … a new design for the website that will be amazing!  I can’t wait to share it with you. So it’s a good time for a break and I hope you are getting some vitamin d too.

I also wanted to invite you to the homestead for another Beautiful Mess Workshop event.  July 30th I will be hosting another creative day here where we’ll explore what it looks like to discover our true voices and find safe space with other women.  It promises to be a memorable day that many women have connected with over the past couple years. I hope you can make it! And if you have come to one in the past, it would be great to have you back too as new explorations always emerge.  Please click here for more information.

See you soon! Happy Homesteading.

Finding home sweet home

3
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Home.Food.Garden, Workshops/Retreats

This past weekend, I hosted an open mic/art show at the homestead.  It was an evening that had me enthralled and I didn’t want it to end.  A poet, a sculptor, a singer and a spoken word performer, amongst a few more writers and creative geniuses, graced us with their offerings.  It was such a sacred time that ushered summer in with profound, but gentle truth.  I am almost at the end of making a big transition that I announced last week. Thank you to everyone for your support and encouragement in this season.  It has meant so much to me and my husband.

In reflecting about the first days of summer that are upon us all, I couldn’t help but think about this past season and the direction of my life.  I wrote this for the Open Mic with the prompt I gave the other participants: We will meet the weekend before Summer Solstice to celebrate the changing of seasons. Using that prompt, please create something, or pick something you already have with a similar theme to share.

I want to share it with those of you who couldn’t be there before I head out of town for my annual no-technology week next week.  I will post some pics of the yard later this week, but here is the piece – Finding Home Sweet Home

 

After I was born, my parents brought me home. Home was a typical middle class suburban house in a Western Washington neighborhood.

The home sat nestled in a few pine trees with other houses not too close, but not too far away either.  I grew up playing in the street with other kids, and painting on an easel my mom set up for me in her art studio.

Although I was young, I remember feeling safe at the fact that my room was sandwiched between my two older brothers’ and my parents’ rooms.

Home changed though as my father’s appetite for a house with a view grew. He moved us to his custom dream home on a cliff with a driveway a tenth of a mile long. Our neighbors were senior citizens destined to live out their lives in peace and tranquility. Read More »

A New Path…

5
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Thoughts on life

I’m sitting at work, at my desk… my empty desk.  The day has been spent going through paperwork and memory-filled-cards and mementoes from the past five years.   I have sorted through my professional life and what is left to this point sits in an assortment of boxes on my office floor.

I am leaving my job this week. Pandora keeps reminding me with song titles like, Let Go, Opportunity to Cry, Be OK, and Only Hope.  This has been a job I have loved and one that has loved me.  I have worked in student life at Azusa Pacific University for five years.  Five years. In my short life, that is a large amount of time.  The opportunity to work here has launched my career, taught me more lessons than I can count and shaped me into the person I am today.

Amazing Staff

This has been a year of discernment and asking big questions.  Since the book came out in September, I have had small inklings of, “Okay, what’s next?”  My activator/achiever (yes, I have both on the strengths-finder) was kicking in, not quite kicking wildly, but starting to get a little restless.

I had no expectations for the book when it came out except that people who need it would be able to find it. And slowly, that has been happening.  As I said, I began to ask myself what this meant: to be a writer.  I looked around at others in my new field and scratched my head a bit.  The one-year phenomena I wrote about a few days ago perplexed me and I didn’t like the idea of “A Beautiful Mess for Cat Lovers” or matching mugs and calendars.  I wasn’t a fan of quick selling self-help guides or books designed to pay the publisher a pretty penny while I did all of the work.  Being just a “writer” seemed like a murky path at this juncture of my life.

So I paced.  I paced a lot in my mind, in my office, in my yard, in my dreams.  I asked myself a lot of questions about what I wanted my life to be about.  I held a lot in my prayers and meditations – but namely everything I held was about asking for a door to open, a window to crack.  I hastily made up my mind to choose what I had always known because I didn’t hear an answer. However, one of my newer friends, whose soul I feel like I have known forever, said, “I think you’re being called out of what is comfortable.”  I was amazed at her clarity in that moment.  She was being, what I define as, a good friend. The best. It wasn’t an answer, but it was what I needed to hear.

She pushed me forward and gave me contacts… she said I needed to teach.  Teach?  Really?  I went into student life to be out of the classroom.  But as I started to converse with a few trusted advisors in my life, my other friend said, “Kristin, what you love is academia. You will never be outside of that.  It makes perfect sense that you would pursue your doctorate.”  A PhD? But I’m young, I’m inexperienced… and I’m running out of excuses.  The truth is I do have experience and I am qualified.  It is funny how hard that is to say sometimes. Read More »

The Evolution of our Homestead

6
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Home.Food.Garden

Something rare is happening in Southern California – it’s raining.  Due to that circumstance, the promised vlog didn’t happen. However that didn’t stop me from thinking of something creative to share with you.  I’m actually MORE excited to share this post with you.

We’ve started working on our yard again… well, we’ve continued in the ever expanding project that is the back half of our property.  Spring is in the air, and amongst all of the turmoil that is going on in the world, I must forge on with my own little plot of it.  I do this to remember my part on this earth and not get lost in it while remembering the stories of my neighbors near and far.

My friend Leah said last week, “I love coming to your house because there is always something new popping up.”  Translation: You all are nuts and just keep working on your yard/house/life. : )

That got me thinking as I saw this picture from 2 years ago – Good grief, our yard looked like this 2 years ago:

This is a dear friend’s bridal shower at my home.  Even though this was a lovely day, I am struck by the vast emptiness of our yard.  Our lone compost bin was the only sign of sustainable life.

Just a matter of months later, after a year of mapping and planning (and demolishing the inside of our house), we let the grass die and started working on a more intentional outdoor space.

This was – hands down – the dirtiest day of my life bar none (remember that show?).  Our intentional life was getting messier and messier as we tried to think of a space without grass and sans a $100 a month water bill.

Nate built these two planters and the evolutionary process was well under way. Read More »

The Cost of Fear

1
Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Home.Food.Garden

Fear abounds; on blogs, television, schools, nations, churches. Fear seeps in and makes us cling to the comfort of what we know which leads to a false sense of security. Fear denies, pushes away and closes off. Fear makes us forget that sacrifice is necessary for life.

Perfection, for me, was the mask hiding my fear.  I only handled matters I knew something about and pretended to know about issues I did not understand. But something shifted as I learned to take the mask off.  I didn’t need to know all of the answers any more.  A change occurred in my soul as I became teachable from other people’s experiences and stories. Together we could make a way through the fuzziness to be seen and so much of life is about just being visible to one another.

The mask kept me closed off, restricted and bound.  I was not willing to risk being known.  How could I be beloved? Shame was my shadow that constantly pulled me back into my hiding place.

The cost of exposing myself — which voiced itself in a fear of being misunderstood, not seen, unappreciated — seemed too great. But in this hibernation I not only distorted myself, I also started seeing others in a warped way too. Unable to give grace room to breathe, I underestimated the Other and the humble power of reconciliation.

My journey of facing my true self has led to hard, but grace-filled conversations of how to live out of this reality. Facebook, blogs, and edited television dramas provide me with a false sense of interacting on a global level. My life isn’t global though — it’s not my job to save the world — I need to save myself. But I can’t do that alone. Read More »