December 29, 2015

Quilter's Planning Party

Another year sure has flown by, hasn't it? Hard as it is to believe, it's already time to start thinking about 2016.

Yvonne at Quilting Jet Girl is hosting the 2016 Planning Linky Party for everyone who wants to set quilting and blogging goals for the year.

Now, I've never really been much of a long term planning person, but over the past couple of years I've been noticing two things about myself that keep me from getting done as much as I'd like to get done.

First, I tend to procrastinate, even on stuff I really want to be doing, like quilting and blogging. Maybe having goals written down and shared will help me buckle down and get 'er done.

Second, I'm easily distracted by new things I want to try. This seems to be a fairly common trait among us quilters, and can be lots of fun sometimes, but I want to try to keep myself a little more on track.

I'd love to make a career out of quilting and designing, so procrastinating and getting off track really aren't useful!

In 2016, I want to:


*Host a mystery quilt along. It's something I've been wanting to do for a while, but I've hesitated because I worried my following was too small. In emailing with Cheryl at Meadow Mist Designs, though, she pointed out that a small following might be a good thing for a first quilt along. So, the quilt is designed and I'm ready to pick out fabric and make my test version. I'm thinking maybe a late winter/early spring start. Anybody interested???

*Submit designs to at least two new magazines. So far I've had designs in Make Modern (affiliate link) and Fat Quarterly. I have also sent one design to another magazine, which I haven't heard back about yet, but that one can't count toward my 2016 goal, even if the quilt becomes a 2016 project! I'd also like to continue working with the ladies at Make Modern as I've found they're great to work with.
Flower Box cushion for Make Modern and  Noodles for Fat Quarterly

*Release a new pattern or tutorial every other month. I was going to aim for every month, but I'm pretty sure that's setting myself up for failure, so I'll cut it in half. I can always exceed my own expectations if I'm extra productive, right? I will allow myself to count the mystery quilt as one of those new patterns, when I release the final instructions. You can see my current patterns in my Etsy shop, and my tutorials are all on my Tutorials page.
I released the Friendship Galaxy and Flower Box patterns in 2015.


*Get back into a regular Bible reading habit. Last school year I did really well getting up a little earlier to have that time for prayer and Bible reading and I really enjoyed it. This year, though, one of the boys I babysit is dropped off almost an hour earlier than I had last year. I tried getting up early enough, but it just doesn't work for me as I was exhausted all day. So, I've been back to my old (bad) habit of sporadic reading, and that doesn't work for me either.

*Have fun exploring (some) new ideas. Quilting is what I do for fun, after all!


Do you set goals or make resolutions at the start of a new year? Since this is new for me, it will be interesting to look back a year from now and see how I did on these goals.

*This post contains an affiliate link, which means if you click the link and make a purchase I may receive a small commission. This does not affect the price you pay.

December 28, 2015

Wise


Devotion for the Week...

I hope you've all had a wonderful Christmas! We certainly did. The boys had several planning and practice sessions the couple of days before Christmas to prepare for waking us up Christmas morning. They had to decide who would play which instruments and which song they would sing, and then they had to practice. It was all very entertaining! I'll just say I'm glad I was already awake when Aiden played the first note on his electric guitar (right outside our bedroom door), as I think that would have been a rather abrupt way to start the day :)

There are a couple of parts of the Christmas story that happened after the day of Jesus' birth, one of which is the visit of the Wise Men. These mysterious men recognized Jesus as being king before anyone else did, and they sought Him out to offer their worship. "After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King Herod, Magi from the east came to Jerusalem and asked, 'Where is the one who has been born king of the Jews? We saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him'...After they had heard the king, they went on their way, and the star they had seen when it rose went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw the star, they were overjoyed.  On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh.” (Matthew 2:1,2, 9-11).

The Bible doesn't tell us much about the Wise Men. Though we normally assume there were three of them, because there were three gifts, the Bible doesn't even tell us how many of them came to Jesus. We know they were astronomers/astrologers who saw the star and recognized it as having meaning; they came from the east; and they were Magi, or wise men. That's about it. 
"Wise men still seek Him" is a phrase I've seen many times, usually in a graphic with silhouettes of three men on camels, and I've always liked the phrase. I've always taken it to mean that wise people seek Jesus...as in, the fact that we are seeking Him is proof of our wisdom.

That's not what the Bible teaches, though. Psalm 111:10 says, "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom; all who follow his precepts have good understanding." Proverbs 1:7 says, "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction." Proverbs 9:10 says, "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding." 

Now, Nathan has had trouble understanding the concept of 'the fear of the Lord', and so I've had to explain it to him a couple of times lately. Like Nathan, you may think it strange that the Bible says we are supposed to be afraid of God, but that's not actually what these verses mean. It's not that we are to be afraid of God, like I would be afraid of a big, snarling dog or like Nathan is afraid of the dark. Rather, it is that we are to hold Him in reverent awe, to realize that we are sinful people and God is holy and righteous. It is not that we are to be afraid, but that we are to feel a sense of our unworthiness, along with an acknowledgement of His worth.

So, once we have that sense of our unworthiness, along with an acknowledgement of His worth, that is the beginning of wisdom, because that is the beginning of us aligning our lives with His will, the beginning of us wanting to live His way.

Wise men (and women!) still seek Him. It's true, but it is not because we are wise that we seek Him. We are wise because we seek Him. Seeking Him...knowing Him...'the fear of the Lord'...these are what give us wisdom.