I finally took the plunge. I have wanted to start a blog for a while but something kept holding me back. What was it? I mean, I love the idea of blogging. I love the fact that anyone can be a published author. I love how blogging gives people the opportunity to express themselves in written form and allows them to put a part of themselves out there for the world to see. Permanently. Oh wait…. Maybe that’s it. What if I’m not a good writer? What if people don’t enjoy it? What if I say something that I later regret? Start a blog? No thanks… too risky.
But here’s the kicker… I happen to believe in taking risks. I believe that is how we grow. And I know that the only way to become a better writer is to write. I believe that writing is good for the soul. Sometimes I have a lot of jumbled up stuff going on in my head and writing gives me a way to organize it. Or sometimes the LORD is teaching me something that is so exciting that I just have to share it! So the main purpose of this blog is this: it gives me a way to process, reflect on, and organize the things that the LORD is teaching me. And, just maybe, he will use it to teach you something as well.
So, what can you expect from this blog? Well, I like to write about things that I am passionate about and here are a few of the things that do it for me:
1. The kingdom of God
2. My family
3. Relationships/community
4. The responsibility of passing on my legacy of Faith to my children
5. Food and recipes
6. Our life with autism
7. Missions/Russia
8. Teaching kids
9. Health and nutrition
So, thanks for stopping by and I hope that this blog blesses you. To conclude this first blog entry I would like to include an excerpt from another blog:
"No one ever gets talker's block. No one wakes up in the morning, discovers he has nothing to say and sits quietly, for days or weeks, until the muse hits, until the moment is right, until all the craziness in his life has died down.
Why then, is writer's block endemic?
The reason we don't get talker's block is that we're in the habit of talking without a lot of concern for whether or not our inane blather will come back to haunt us. Talk is cheap. Talk is ephemeral. Talk can be easily denied.
We talk poorly and then, eventually (or sometimes), we talk smart. We get better at talking precisely because we talk. We see what works and what doesn't, and if we're insightful, do more of what works. How can one get talker's block after all this practice?
Writer's block isn't hard to cure.
Just write poorly. Continue to write poorly, in public, until you can write better. Clear, crisp, honest writing about what you see in the world. Or want to see. Or teach (in writing).
If you're concerned with quality, of course, then not writing is not a problem, because zero is perfect and without defects. Shipping nothing is safe.
Write like you talk. Often."
Seth Godin
So here goes nothing…