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Morning Run

I fought with myself all morning. Do I go? Do I stay home and keep plugging away at my long to-do list? I haven’t been in months, so why ruin a good thing? I haven’t been in months so I need to get back to it.

Going won.

As soon as I started walking the track, music pounding in my ear buds, tension poured out of me like a belch of grass from the lawn mower when I tip it back to turn around. Anger, fear, frustration, sadness… in one blast of energy that propelled me into a genuine run around the track.

It felt good to shed that armor. It felt good to really run, to sweat, to push all that tension through my heels into the floor.

Of course, after about 4 laps, the gasping for air, the screaming lungs, and the sore muscles demanded I slow to my usual barely-faster-than-walking pace.

Then I saw the ambulance pull up.

Familiar dark-blue figures with gigantic duffel bags, silver and white stretcher, bright red backboard, EMT patches on their shoulders. Crowd around an older man who had collapsed outside a workout classroom. Lap after lap, I caught glimpses of a process I was only too familiar with. As I rounded one corner, I peered down into the kids corner to see my five-year-old daughter watching them too.

My armor was gone, burned up at the beginning of my run. So the tears sprang as unbidden as the memories of EMTs crowding our house, digging through the giant duffels, and eventually carrying our daughter out the front door. For the last time.

Fortunately, I had sweat so much I didn’t have enough tears to pour down my face.

Who knew a run could be so…Eventful? Emotional? Challenging? Laden with memories?

We Have a Winner!

I just posted the winner for the Voice4U giveaway on my review blog, Joy In This Journey Reviews. If you entered, please make sure to check there to see if you won!

Memorizing Philippians – Week Eight

How are you at finishing big projects? My track record isn’t great. I’m the kind of person who gets an idea, dives in with every ounce of energy at my disposal, and works super-hard… for awhile. Then my energy wanes, I hit a road-block, and I lose all that momentum. And then, often, the project falls by the wayside.

I’m at the stage of lost-momentum with this project to memorize Philippians. The road-block that slowed me down was partially the time-change and partially the illnesses of my family. The best time for me to memorize is first thing in the morning. But when I’m up at night, or when I’m just plain tired, I have a really difficult time dragging myself out of bed.

But I’m not going to follow my usual pattern. That’s where the accountability of having let everyone know I’m doing this comes in. This week I’m diving back into it. Here’s my plan:

  • Add the book of Philippians to my iPod. This way I can listen to it while driving in the car or working out (which also hasn’t happened lately, but I’m determined to get back to). It takes about 20 minutes to listen to the book straight through, and I drive for 20 minutes several times a week. I will try to say it along with the recording where I’ve memorized, as well, so it’s practice.
  • Outline the first chapter. I still mix up phrases here and there, so I’m hoping that taking some time to outline will help me see what goes where and remember it better.

I was working on Philippians 1:18-22 when I lost steam. So I’ll be reviewing the first 22 verses this week and really focusing on getting them correct, before I move on to the next 2-3 verses.

How far have you gotten? How are you overcoming the roadblocks you’ve faced?

This is a continuing series. Read the story behind this project and my previous posts here.

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