Posts Tagged ‘links’

Recently Discovered Blogs

March 22nd, 2010

In the past week I have added a number of blogs to my Google Reader that I’m really enjoying and would love to share. But, let me start with a little preface…

In the past I have primarily read blogs about Christianity, church, theology, and the like. But, lately I don’t have much time or energy to spend thinking about theology or theorizing about church. My mental energy is instead spent on thoughts about when to start my baby on solid foods, how to get him to take good naps, what to make for dinner, and other homemaking topics. Because of this shift in focus the types of blogs that I read have also changed.

Don’t get me wrong on the rare moment when my son is sleeping soundly or my husband is watching him I still love to read and learn from blogs like Godspace and The Carnival in My Head. But, for this season in my life when I have a spare moment the blogs that I go to first have been blogs that deal with the day-to-day stuff that I’m currently thinking about. They are blogs that deal with what it means to be an intentional and thoughtful parent, what it means to eat healthy and feed your family real food, they are blogs that deal with strategies for getting organized and keeping an organized home. A few of them are food blogs that are just so beautiful that taking a few minutes out of my day to look at the pictures and dream about the food can change my whole mood.

So, here are the blogs that I’ve recently discovered and keep coming back to whenever I can between laundry, nursing, and dishes:

Nourished Kitchen

Simple Mom

A Nourishing Home

Cannelle et Vanille

Smitten Kitchen

Cooking Books

Baked Bree

Peaceful Parenting

Passionate Homemaking

Enjoy!

Rejoicing in the journey -
Bethany Stedman

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What is a Spiritual Practice Blog Series

July 29th, 2009

Christine Sine’s blog series on What is a Spiritual Practice has been going strong and there have already been a number of very interesting articles and the promise of more to come. If you haven’t been following this series, I encourage you to check it out. Here are the posts so far:

Jason ClarkSmoking to the Glory of God?

Mark ScandretteLove-Making as a Spiritual Practice

T FreemanThe Spiritual Practice of Apologizing

Brigid Walsh Gleaning as Spiritual Practice

Bowie Snodgrass Grief as Spiritual Practice

Thomas Turner Engagement as Spiritual Practice

Stan Thornburg Making Space for the Rabbi

Gary Heard Encountering the Stranger as Spiritual Practice and GPS Navigation as Spiritual Practice

Jason Fowler Listening for God’s Voice in Music

Sheila Hight Birdkeeping as Spiritual Practice

Steve Taylor Composting as Spiritual Practice

John O’Hara Anyone Can Cook – Spirituality in the Kitchen

Bethany Stedman – crying as a spiritual practice

Christopher Heuertz – Feeling close to God in the graveyard

Gerard Kelly – twittering as a spiritual practice

Tim Mathis – blogging as as a spiritual practice

Mary Naegeli – Writing a sermon as spiritual practice

Hannah Haui Cultural Protocol as spiritual practice

Jamie Arpin Ricci Pet Ownership as spiritual practice

Matt Stone – Listening to Enemies as Spiritual Practice

Dan Cooper – Washing Dishes as Spiritual Discipline

Maryellen Young – The spiritual practice of taking a shower

Christine Sine - virtual Eucharist: Is this a spiritual practice

christine Sine - Is Breathing a Spiritual Practice

I found today’s post “Smoking to the Glory of God?” to be particularly helpful to the dialogue as it reminded us that, “Everything can be a ‘spiritual practice’, but not everything is a ‘spiritual practice’.  It is the ends, the means, and the formation that takes place within our activities that determines what is ‘spiritual’.

Rejoicing in the journey -
Bethany Stedman

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Some Random Link Fun

June 17th, 2009

Alright, so today for something light and more fun, here are some links that I wanted to share:

First off I never enter contests or giveaways, I am not sure why, but I just never do, but I really think that these camera bags are just too cool! So, I’m entered and you should too – all you have to do is leave a comment (and tell others about it for an added chance to win) ;) Check out the rest of Natalie’s blog and pictures while you are there, she’s a great photographer and I have enjoyed reading her blog for quite some time.

Speaking of cool bags I have decided that I would love this messenger bag from Moop to use as mine and Bryan’s diaper bag – it’s so simple and cute and totally unisex… too bad it’s so expensive… maybe with the next child. I also love this giant market bag from Moop – seriously so cute! I’ve never been into shopping and really never been into bags/purses – I literally have one purse at a time and I use it until it completely falls apart before getting a new one – but sometimes it’s fun to just pretend I am a “purse girl” and if I ever was these are the types of bags I’d love.

This week Bryan and I found this fun recipe, “Five Minutes a Day for Fresh-Baked Bread.” So, cool and it really does produce great bread in very little time. Basically you make a big batch of very wet dough which you NO NOT KNEAD, then you stick it in the fridge and whenever you want fresh bread you just take a little out, let it sit for about 40 minutes and then bake it. Again, NO kneading. The dough lasts in the fridge for up to two weeks.

Today, Christine Sine at Godspace posted this prayer. I was drawn in with the first line “O Breath of God, you moved on the face of the waters and created order out of chaos…Calm our hearts that we may hear you!” And after reading the rest I was convinced that this is my prayer for today. Hope it touches you as much as it touched me today.

Rejoicing in the journey -
Bethany Stedman

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State of the World’s Mother’s 2009

June 17th, 2009

The last few days I’ve been reading (semi-skimming) Save the Children’s State of the World’s Mothers 2009 Report. It’s a 62 page document comparing different countries in terms of care for Children and Mothers. It’s been a really interesting read so I thought I’d share just a few facts from the research that I found surprising and/or interesting:

-          “Four decades ago, America had the best high school graduation rate in the world, but by 2006 it had slipped to 18th out of 24 industrialized countries. As recently as 1995, the U.S. was still tied for first place in the proportion of young adults with a college degree, but by 2000 it had slipped to 9th and by 2006 to 14th. According to the latest OECD figures, the United States has one of the highest college dropout rates in the industrialized world – 53 percent of Americans who enter college do not finish. Only Italy has a higher college dropout rate (55 percent).”

-          “Worldwide, 75 million children fail to complete primary school, either because they drop out in the early grades or because they never got the change to attend school at all.”

-          “In the United States, nearly 2.5 million – or 68 percent – of all American fourth graders are not reading at grade level.”

-          New Mexico, Nevada, Mississippi, Arizona and Alabama are the five lowest-ranked states in the School Success Index. Connecticut, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Vermont and Maine are the highest scoring.

-          The Complete Mothers’ Index ranks countries based on a number of factors to determine “where mothers fare best and where they face the greatest hardships… The contrast between the top-ranked country, Sweden, and the lowest-ranked country, Niger, is striking. Skilled health personnel are present at virtually every birth in Sweden, while only 33 percent of births are attended in Niger. A typical Swedish woman has nearly 17 years of formal education and will live to be 83 years old, 65 percent are using some modern method of contraception, and only one in 185 will lose a child before his or her fifth birthday. At the opposite end of the spectrum, in Niger, a typical woman has little over 3 years of education and will live to be 56. Only 5 percent of women are using modern contraception, and 1 child in 6 dies before his or her fifth birthday. At this rate, every mother in Niger is likely to suffer the loss of a child.”

-          The United States ranked 27th on the Complete Mothers’ Index. “One of the key indicators used to calculate well-being for mothers is lifetime risk of maternal mortality. The United States’ rate for maternal mortality is 1 in 4,800 – one of the highest in the developed world. Thirty-five out of 43 countries performed better than the United States on this indicator, including all the Western, Northern and Southern European countries (save Estonia and Albania) as well as Australia, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech Republic, Hungary, Japan, New Zealand, Poland, Slovakia, and Ukraine. A woman in the United States is more than 5 times as likely as a woman in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece or Italy to die from pregnancy-related causes and her risk of maternal death is nearly 10-fold that of a woman in Ireland.”

There’s a lot more info in the report, but those were just a few little things that stood out to me.

These facts are sobering and personally make me wonder what can I and others like me do to change the living conditions of so many women and children around the world…?

Rejoicing in the journey -
Bethany Stedman

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Some Thoughts to think about from a Friend

March 12th, 2009

Today I read two great posts that really hit home for me on my friend Tara’s blog, Story-Formed.

The first is called “Hungry, anyone?” and I recommend you go check it out.

The second was mostly this quote from Henri Nouwen that I thought I’d share with you here as well:

So what about my life of prayer?  Do I like to pray?  Do I want to pray?  Do I spend time praying?  Frankly, the answer is no to all three questions…The truth is that I do not feel much, if anything, when I pray.  There are no emotions, bodily sensations, or mental visions.  None of my five senses is being touched – no special smells, no special sounds, no special sights, no special tastes, and no special movements.  Whereas for a long time the Spirit acted so clearly through my flesh, now I feel nothing.  I have lived with the expectation that prayer would become easier as I grow older and closer to death.  But the opposite seems to be happening.  The words “darkness” and “dryness” seem to best describe my prayer today.

Maybe part of this darkness and dryness is the result of my overactivity.  As I grow older I become busier and spend less and less time in prayer.  But I probably should not blame myself in that way.  The real questions are, “What are the darkness and the dryness about?  What do they call me to?”…

Are the darkness and dryness of my prayer signs of God’s absence, or are they signs of a presence deeper and wider than my senses can contain?  Is the death of my prayer the end of my intimacy with God or the beginning of a new communion, beyond words, emotions, and bodily sensations?…

The year ahead of me must be a year of prayer, even though I say that my prayer is as dead as a rock.  My prayer surely is, but not necessarily the Spirit’s prayer in me.  Maybe the time has come to let go of “my” prayer, “my” effort to be close to God, “my” way of being in communion with the Divine, and to allow the Spirit of God to blow freely in me.

rejoicing in the joureny -
Bethany

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