Petals from the Basket

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Let’s Make It Practical

Happy November! This year, as in years past, your gratitude has an opportunity to come to the forefront. And once again, I would love for you to join me (in a new way this year…but more about that in a minute) in not just listing on social media what you’re thankful for. Though that is indeed a great thing to do.

However, let’s take it one step further. Let’s make it practical and not just state our appreciation but express it in written, verbal, or tangible ways to the person or organization for which we are thankful.

Below is a free printable gratitude-recipient list that you can download and fill in as the month progresses.

As I stated above, I’m adding a new dimension this year. Throughout the month, I’ll be posting videos to our YouTube channel that are practical, easy, frugal ideas for expressing gratitude in November—and all year long!

There will be craft ideas, recipes, gift ideas, and letter-writing “hacks” that will make your intentional expressions of gratitude unique to you and treasured by their recipients.

So let me start things off by saying thank you, dear faith-friend, for following Petals from the Basket (the blog, the books, and the YouTube channel), where we provide tools and resources for everyday Christian living.

“I thank my God in all my remembrance of you” (Philippians 1:3, ESV).

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Click here to visit our YouTube channel. (You’ll want to subscribe while you’re there so that you can receive an e-mail when we post a new video. Simply click the Subscribe button and then “ring the bell” to get notifications.)

Click here (or on the photo of the .pdf) to download your free printable gratitude-recipient list to use in the month of November.

One Thing Leads to Another

He drew pictures on his church bulletin as a child. He created more detailed pencil drawings on the scratch paper that had one time served as a homework assignment. While waiting “on hold” at his desk, he doodled on note pads and on the inside covers of planners and brochures.

Then, at the age of 73, he got “caught.” His wife saw his drawings and said, “You should do that more often. You’re good at it!” Because they were traveling at the time, enjoying the quaint little town with the adorable little shops, she inched him over to the life-altering shelf in the local bookstore—the shelf containing the sketch books.

As her gift, she treated him to the hardbound copy in a medium size. It was small enough not to intimidate. It was of a nice enough quality to encourage.

And my dear husband has been sketching ever since.

So what about you? What is it that’s patiently awaiting its turn to shine through in your life? Are you a musician at heart? A writer? An artist? A teacher? Entrepreneur? Missionary? Philanthropist? Athlete? Speaker?

God has given you desires, gifts, abilities. And He states in Psalm 37:4 that He longs to fulfill them: “Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the desires of your heart” (ESV).

Maybe you don’t even know what abilities, gifts, or desires are lurking in the background, waiting to appear. Maybe they aren’t even present yet.

Maybe, just maybe, the thing you’re methodically doing now will lead to the action you will routinely accomplish in the future, which will lead you to the moment when that hidden desire will make itself known.

And when it does, regardless of your age or location, go after it. Use it in the season of life and for the specific purpose for which it has been honed, trained, and perfected.

God doesn’t make mistakes. He is not mean. His plan, His time, His purpose is always right. So keep doing, taking action, and working hard. The season you’re in is there for a purpose. Embrace it. Know that God entrusted it to you. Be encouraged.

And then, maybe doodle a picture on the back of your church bulletin. Who knows where it may lead.

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My Third Year as a Second Wife

To summarize a year of one’s life in a brief blog post begins with a series of questions: What mattered? What didn’t? What was insignificant to most but stood out to us? What stood out to others even though it was insignificant to us?

Wait…what did I do yesterday (let alone last year at this time)?

For the past two years I have “summarized” that year of our marriage with a blog post that had the goal both to inform and to educate. (After you finish reading this post, you may view those posts here and here.) In full disclosure, this post is a month overdue, and if that’s not an indication of the year we just completed, I don’t know what is!

Last month, Joe and I celebrated our third anniversary. This year’s “celebration” was to rest, do laundry, rest some more, read, eat leftovers, watch the last hour of a Hallmark Mystery, and then rest some more! Exciting, right? Perhaps this year more than in previous ones, I have learned that a day like this is what true love actually looks like. (In our defense, we had just come off of a weekend with a boatload of overnight guests/meal guests in our home, so we gave ourselves permission to rest up from a fun but busy weekend and celebrate at another time!)

As for the year we were celebrating?

A noteworthy birthday for Joe last October.

A major move from Indiana to South Carolina in April.

And a year filled with the realization that every day, every moment, every breath was enjoyed and completed only by the grace of a merciful God.

I could use this post to share events, completed goals, laughter-provoking stories, and tear-producing memories, but those are our stories and memories, and they lack the connection that I desire between you as the reader and I as the writer. They lack your involvement, and I value you too much to make this solely about us.

The link between your stories and mine is not merely the similarities between various events. It lies, instead, in the lessons that we can learn from our experiences, the principles that we can apply in the midst of them, and the gratitude that we can hold onto because of them.

Therefore, those are the springboards for what I am choosing to share with you from my third year as a second wife (and no, you don’t have to have a spouse to apply these).

Look for a lesson in every experience.

How can I be a better spouse/friend/teacher/grandparent/neighbor for having gone through this?

How can I use this experience to help me avoid this situation in the future or to handle it better if/when I do face it again?

Are we as a couple (and/or am I as a person) better, stronger, wiser, for having had/having chosen this experience?

Apply biblical principles in the midst of every experience.

Note: This means that you need to be faithful in studying/learning/hearing God’s Word, so that when it’s time to apply these principles, you have them in your “character warehouse,” ready for use!

Throughout this past year, Joe and I recognized that knowing what to do and doing it were often worlds apart. In the end, we always agreed that applying truth was far superior to knowing truth…every time.

Our opinions, emotions, concerns change. God’s Word never does. That’s why we had to cling to biblical principles in the midst of major (and minor) decisions, location changes, and the re-evaluation of our priorities.

Be grateful for every experience.

Grateful? For disagreements? For unkind words from those who would seek to divide us (biblical principle: Mark 10:9!)? For major life changes at this season of life?

Yes. Grateful.

Grateful because we’re walking through them together. Grateful because God has not left us or forsaken us. Grateful because we are stronger, wiser, better, more humble, more confident for having reached the other side, prepared for the next experience (whether good or bad) that will teach us the next lesson, to which we can apply biblical principles, and for which we will one day be grateful.

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One final note: For me, this year carried one additional, personal lesson: My identity pertaining to Joe is not in being Joe’s second wife; it is in being Joe’s wife. While we both unhesitatingly acknowledge that Joe was married before and loved his late wife dearly, we also firmly believe that our union following her passing was God’s direction, His timing, His plan.

Therefore, this will be the final post in this series of “a year in the life of a second wife.” It’s too easy to get tripped up if you attempt to move forward while looking backward.

The Effects of Total Immersion

The Captain’s Corner

In my last blog post (which you can read later, here), I mentioned that I had spent a few weeks assisting with a summer aviation camp for high school students. The campers were immersed in the field of flying and actually got to fly the airplane on either their first of second day of camp!

The campers’ enthusiasm was both obvious and contagious; their conversation, about flying and airplanes. It was a joy for me to share their fascination with flight.

From my first flying lesson at the age of fifteen, I too was captivated by flight. Additionally, my numerous years of flying often filled my mind with airplanes and all things aviation-related.

However, this can lead to a personal fault, which I freely confess: If you ask me about airplanes, you’ll hear an answer filled with more than you ever wished to know. In other words: extreme input of information leads to extreme output in explanation!

This principle of input and its corresponding output reminds me to consider God’s Word and its role in everyday Christian living.

Psalm 119:113, KJV – “…Thy law do I love.”

Psalm 119:174, ESV – “…Your law is my delight.”

I have to ask myself, How much love do I have for God’s Word? How much do I delight in it? Am I fascinated and fixated on God’s Word as much as I am on the topic of flying? 

When we immerse ourselves in God’s Word, it will be reflected in our conversation, as seen in Psalm 119:171 (ESV): “My lips will pour forth praise, for you teach me your statutes”). Additionally, we will have a ready answer to give to others who see the hope of God within us: “But sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence” (1 Peter 3:15, NASB).

Click here to visit our YouTube channel today to hear Joe share some highlights from this post.

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Of Gray Hair and YouTube Channels

We’re branching out! This blog will remain the foundation for all that we do in the other realms, but in addition to our Facebook page and Instagram account, we are adding a YouTube channel!

Each day we will post a 2- to 5-minute devotional thought via a YouTube video. By subscribing to our channel, you can view the videos during the most convenient time of your day! Please take a moment to watch the video below, then subscribe to the Petals from the Basket channel on YouTube! We’ll see you back here on Saturday for a special blog post from Captain Joe!