Category Archives: Daily Life

More Hummingbird Photographs

Hummingbird photograph 1I’m getting the hang of how to get some pretty good photographs so I’ll continue to share them with you if you’re not bored with them yet!

I tried taking them near dawn and found that the flash washed out all the color when the light was too low, it seems that the best combination of light is the evening near dusk where there’s still plenty of natural light but it’s low enough that the flash comes on as well.  Then you pretty much point at the area and simply click the shot every time the flash recharges because if you try to "pose" a shot they’re so fast they’re gone.

hummingbird photo 2In this first shot two of the rufous hummingbirds are fighting for position.

In this second shot again they are jockeying for position.  When I am taking these photos I’m about 2 feet away and one of the hummers tends to come right up to the camera and tries to stare me down. 

hummingbirds photo 3I have hundreds of shots now, so I’m only trying to pick ones that hae something in them that is different or unusual.  In this last photo, in the high res version (I’m not sure how well it will show up at 75 dpi) the red throat of the ruby-throated hummingbird at the left just glows as does the green back on the hummingbird in the center front.  I hop you’re not bored with my "babies!"

Tomorrow I’ll be gone all day as I am going to church in the morning and then we drive up to Hume Lake to take Michael-Brett to camp for the week.  We’ll spend the afternoon at the lake just hanging around with family and friends — pretty much a perfect afternoon if my beloved husband were with us 🙁  Oh Well!

Please pray for Steve as he’ll be preaching at 11:30 AM PDT.  Hope you’re having a relaxing, enjoyable weekend.

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs11:8-10 The righteous man is rescued from trouble, and it comes on the wicked instead. With his mouth the godless destroys his neighbor, but through knowledge the righteous escape. When the righteous prosper, the city rejoices; when the wicked perish, there are shouts of joy.  NIV

 

 

Making People Feel Welcome by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Two Rufous Hummingbirds fightingBefore I start on my topic for the day, here’s the best photo of hummingbirds that I got from yesterday’s efforts.  About 50 photos to get 2 or 3 of interest is the average… thank God for digital "film" it’s a lot more affordable than the old ways!

All groups of people share some things in common, basically because people share things in common.  One of those things most of us share is the fear of new things and meeting new people.  Do you remember being the "new kid in school?"  Or perhaps coming into an organization where the ladies knew each other so well and were such good friends that you felt you’d never have a chance to break into their circle?

I’m sure each of you can think of a group, church or organization that you were a first time visitor to.  Did you feel welcomed or ignored?  What happened to produce either feeling?  Did someone greet you and notice that you were new?  Or did it seem like you were invisible?  Have you in turn learned from and then acted on what you learned from that experience?  In other words, if you were ignored when you first came, have you made an effort to notice new people and welcome them?

No group or person is perfect… often times a group is very, very friendly, but just missed the fact that you were there the first day.  Most ofen groups that are accused of being cliquish are really just good friends that forgot to keep looking outwards to welcome others.  In other words they don’t plan to exclude… they just forget to include.  Sometimes groups can get involved in their own internal dynamics that they completely lose the fact that there are new people in their midst.  This is the point where new people can be made to feel unwelcome or rejected.  That’s why it’s so important to develop the habit and take time every meeting to look for and welcome in new people.  

In reality, there aren’t really any welcoming organizations… there are welcoming people that make up welcoming organizations.  When you go to church each week are you excited to see and catch up with your friends?   That’s a really good thing… but remember to take a few minutes and look for a face you don’t recognize and make the first move to talk to them.  Maybe introduce yourself, ask some questions about him or her and then introduce them to someone else.  It takes so little to make someone feel comfortable and welcomed!

Now here’s the really, really important part… look for that person the next week or two.  If you see them, make sure you go talk to them again!  That’s about all the effort it takes to make someone feel comfortable and noticed!  I have to cheat… as my memory is notoriously bad for names and faces!  So I carry a journal with me and write down the information the minute I can sneak away to do it.  Knowing I’m going to write it down makes me think about their name more so I have a better chance at remembering it!  Then, once I’ve written it down,  I can flip back to it the next week or even a month later and refresh my memory! 

I’ve also at times taken names, addresses and phone #s and put it in there.  Once, we had a new couple come to church, Bonnie and Scot are their names.  When I finished talking with her I remembered where she said she had bought her home (she told me the street name and we’re a small community)  so I looked it up on our local real estate page and sent her a card.  It wasn’t really a big deal, but it was the start of our friendship, which continues to grow.

A great use for all the graphics many of you have collected on your computers is to make little "welcome" cards and maybe a great bag to put cookies in.  If you have a new neighbor or a new worker in your office or a new family in your church, send them a little welcome note (with or without the chocolate chip cookies!)  It’s amazing how welcome you can make someone feel with very little effort.  It’s a good habit to form!   If someone is new in the neighborhood and they have children, offer to sit for them as they run errands to get settled in.  Invite them over for a barbeque to get to know them… chances are your life will be made richer because you did!

We have some new neighbors about 4 properties over (about a 1/4 mile in our neighborhood!)  We also have tons of over-ripe bananas in our freezer that I’m going to convinve my daughter Jennifer to make up into her awesome banana bread and we’ll take it to them with a card.  Practice what you preach is my motto!!!

To any of you that are new readers in the last month or so… WELCOME!  I’m so delighted to have you and hope you’ll take a minute to write a comment introducing yourself.  If you do you’ll also be entering yourself in our Blog Contest to win some free graphics!  I draw on the 16th and the last day of the month.

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY: Prov 9:7-9  Whoever corrects a mocker invites insult; whoever rebukes a wicked man incurs abuse.  Do not rebuke a mocker or he will hate you; rebuke a wise man and he will love you.  Instruct a wise man and he will be wiser still; teach a righteous man and he will add to his learning.
NIV
Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Today’s the Last Day!

To get your comments posted for the blog contest!  It’s also the last day of the "Christmas in July" Sale at DAISIE COMPANY.  If you’re thinking about Christmas purchases at all, make a quick trip over there and do your shopping.  The Daisie button to the right will take you to the store.

My husband has finished up at the fire in Idaho and they routed his truck now to Missoula, Montana.  I thought he was going to get to come home but instead he’s sitting in a hotel room waiting for his next assignment or after a time, to come home if they don’t need him.  He woke me up this morning by reading me Proverbs 31.  It was so cute I wish I could have recorded it for you.  He read it in a dramatic fashion and was telling me what a wonderful wife I was (until he got to some of the parts where I fall down miserably!!!)  Then we laughed… places like where it says she gets up before the sun and tend to the servants. 

I told him I get up before the sun, somewhere in the world (giggle).  Ahhh well… it gives me something to work towards as a goal…. NOT!!!!  When you read Proverbs 31 it is a tribute to an amazing woman, the writer’s wife.  When you think of ancient cultures and how little "rights" women often had, this woman was a business woman, a real estate investor, a manager, and many other amazing things.  In fact I can get pretty intimidated by the things she tended to on her list, but then I  remember this woman was being praised for what had occured in her whole life, not just a single day.  Some days when I read this proverb I want to crawl back under the covers and just not face the day.  But intimidating you is not the goal of this proverb or this blog post! 

It’s important to remember that especially as women, our lives will be lived out in seasons.  We can have everything we set as a goal that is attainable, that we are capable of achieving, but often we can’t have everything at one time or as fast as we might like. There is a time to sow and a time to reap in our lives and when we give the importance to doing the right thing in the right season the Lord has a way of rewarding our diligence.

 When my children were little I often dreamed of the day I would create and design products for companies.  I dreamed of the day that I would advance in my career, I did set it as a goal, but I wasn’t willing to sacrifice my children’s childhood to pursue my goals with all my energy at that time.  Could I have been farther along in my career right now?  Perhaps, perhaps not… but it was a choice that I have never once regretted making.  I enjoyed every day I was privileged to be a stay-at-home-mom teaching, nurturing and playing with them.  I did build my business during that time, but I built it in a way that the business wasn’t the priority — my family was.

At times during their childhood (when their father died) I had to work full time outside of the home, but still, I made them my priority and we found time to do the things and make the memories that we all now treasure. 

I encourage those of you that might feel frustrated right now and feel like you’re not accomplishing anything significant with your life, or achieving the goals you’ve set for yourself to pause and take a look around you.  Look at the life that you have made and those you love and with whom you have the joy of sharing it.  Whether you’re married or single, have children or don’t have them, work or don’t work outside the home… what will really matter in twenty years or more is the laughter that you are sharing, the love that you give and receive and the lives that you touch and help along life’s road.  You are leading a rich life if that life is being led with the desire to touch others.

Many of you will (like me) see a few things in this proverb that you can say, "I’m doing that" and a few that you’ll say, "I’ll probably NEVER do that!" and a few things that you’ll think, "I need to work a little more on that one."  I hope you’ll pick up your bible and read the whole Proverb, it’s well worth taking a few minutes to mull over!

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs 31:10-12  Who can find a virtuous and capable wife? She is worth more than precious rubies. Her husband can trust her, and she will greatly enrich his life. She will not hinder him but help him all her life.   NLT

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

 

I Have a Challenge For You Today, by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Is there someone who has been a blessing to you that you need to say, "Thank you" to?  Is there someone that is a sweet and calming presence in your family?  Have you been meaning to tell a friend what her friendship means to you (on no special occasion or Birthday so it’s especially meaningful?)   I want to challenge you today, to make a call, write a letter, send a card or an email to two or three people who make your life a better, more cheerful place.

I declare today is "Special Person Appreciation Day."  Too often, we get caught up in the day-to-day affairs of life and forget to say "Thanks," "You’re Special," or "Having you in my life means so much to me."  The older I get, the more I know that if you think it you must take time to say it — because sometimes you don’t get another chance.

Those of you who have an expensive graphics addiction (you KNOW WHO YOU ARE !)  Today’s the day to make a card and send it to everyone you can think of who’s touched your life and made it a brighter place with the light of their smiles!  Make one card and change the words for each person.  You won’t believe how much joy your thoughtfulness will bring to them.  Sunshine and cheer is catching you know.  Appreciation that is communicated clearly and publically means soooooo much to those who receive it!   And when you finish, write or say, "Tag, you’re it!  You get to pass it on to someone else that YOU appreciate!"

I’m sending my appreciation and thanks to all of you (about 500 visitors a day) that come here and encourage ME!  I am fast approaching my 200th post (boy I sure do talk a lot!)  I have grown so much since I started this blog and you have caused me to think things through so that I could express them clearly enough to share the thoughts with all of you… I am so thankful I have each of you in my life.  Happy Special Person Appreciation Day!  TAG YOU’RE IT!!!!!

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs 24:3-6  "A house is built by wisdom and becomes strong through good sense.  Through knowledge its rooms are filled with all sorts of precious riches and valuables.  A wise man is mightier than a strong man, and a man of knowledge is more powerful than a strong man.  So don’t go to war without wise guidance; victory depends on having many counselors."

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Do You Procrastinate? Tips for Overcoming Procrastination and Getting Going! by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Procrastination… most of us struggle with it.  We KNOW what we SHOULD be doing, but want to do what we WANT to do rather than what we OUGHT to do!  Is this reflective of your struggles in life too, or am I the only one who struggles with this?!

"I’ll do that later… right now I want to do…"  "I’m just not in the mood… maybe tomorrow…"  "I’ll just do this and then I’ll get to…."  For me, procrastination usually happens when it’s something someone else is requiring of me, especially if I have something I’d much rather be doing at the moment.  I used to struggle horrifically with procrastination, but have gotten much, much better in the last 7 or 8 years.  How?  Necessity!  I just couldn’t be a licensed artist and not get things done on time as promised!

Working in the licensing industry, the first thing I had to tame was my natural artist’s inclination to put off until next week things that I should be doing today!  I really began to hate the feeling of pressure and stress that I had once "used" to get myself motivated.  I liked how much work I accomplished under the gun, so I artificially created that adrenaline rush by delaying until the last possible moment to get started.  What I didn’t realize is the toll it was taking on my body, soul and spirit.  Yes, I would get a great deal of work done, but then I would collapse for days afterwards and my moods would plunge along with my energy level.  I realized that either my career had to change or I was going to have to change the way I approached my career.

How did I learn to counteract my natural tendency?  Here’ a few of my tips (and tricks) that I use to control my impulses and get more work done with less stress.

  1. If I’m procrastinating about a certain task, I stop to ask myself a few questions. "Why am I reluctant to do this task?  Why am I emotionally balking at getting started?  Is there something that I’m fearing or disliking about it?"  Once I tune into my emotions, I can often figure out and then overcome my emotional reluctance which frequently frees me up on a creative level to begin the task.
  2. I find that for me, procrastination is often a symptom of being overwhelmed.  When a task feels too large and overwhelming I don’t know where to begin and how best to tackle it.  If I take time to stop and think a project/task through on paper, it helps me to break it down into "doable" segments.  When I have a large task broken up into smaller segments, I can accomplish one segment at a time and the large task will eventually get done in the process.  It’s the old adage, "How do you eat an elephant?  One bite at a time!"
  3. In my life, procrastination can be also be a symptom of perfectionism.  If I’m afraid I can’t do the task perfectly, I don’t want to start "failing."  When I get bogged down in perfectionism, I stifle my creativity and lose the joy that comes from the process.  Creativity is a meandering path, not a straight walk.  By starting my task sooner rather than at the last minute, I allow myself time for exploration and happy accidents or mistakes along the way.  These unexpected difficulties often produce the best creativity in the long run.  Too often when I would wait until the last moment I ran out of time and had to settle for less than I could have achieved had I allowed more time for the process. I’ve learned that perfection isn’t usually achievable, so I aim for excellence.     
  4. Forget about the finish line… just get started.  Inertia is usually my biggest stumbling block.  I just can’t seem to pick up my feet and go into my studio, or turn off HGTV and get to work cleaning the house!  I’ve learned to "trick" myself using a timer when I get bogged down I’m not able to get working on a task.  I tell the little girl inside my grown up body, "I’m going to set a timer and your’e only going to have to work fifteen minutes on this project.  When the timer goes off you can stop."  My little girl is fooled by this tactic and gets started more easily.  However, the grown woman inside of me loves momentum, so once she gets rolling she doesn’t want to stop until it’s finished.  Learning how YOU tick, can help you to find little tricks that will work for your life as I’ve found this one that works for me.
  5. Record your accomplishments on your daytimer, not just your unending list of tasks!  When I’m particularly struggling with procrastination, I will put my list aside and start writing down a list of what I accomplish.  For some reason it’s a little more exciting for me to see what I’ve gotten done rather than what I still have left to do!
  6. Reward yourself along the way.  Don’t make all of your hard tasks come first before you get to do something you want to do, mix them up.  Make your favorite project a reward for getting 2 or 3 other tasks done.  Mix easy and hard tasks, just be careful you don’t put your hard tasks always at the bottom of the list!
  7. Finally, stop to pat yourself on the back.  I find that I tend to discount what I’ve already accomplished and don’t even stop for a moment to think, "You did a good job on that AJ"  Inside my head I hear a critical taskmaster who is absolutely unsatisfyable.  She always want more, demands more and is never satisfied with my efforts.  I’ve had to learn to silence her voice and tell myself the truth about what I’ve gotten done.  It isn’t "bragging" to stop and admire what you’ve finished, it’s a necessary part of emotional health.

If you have any tricks, tips or helpful ideas on overcoming procrastination (or have a question about it) please post to the comments.  If there’s interest I’ll post some more on the subject at a later date.

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs 19:6,8  Lots of people flock around a generous person, everyone’s a friend to the philanthropist.  Grow a wise heart — you’ll do yourself a favor, keep a clear head — you’ll find a good life."  The Message Bible

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Take Time to Remember, and Then Celebrate! by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

God Bless America Tag

Some really amazing things happened to allow our country to come into existence.  Many men and women laid down their lives for a dream that they believed God was calling them to be a part of founding.  Our country was a battle away from death many times.  If we weren’t fighting the British, we were fighting each other, the elements, the need for men and money, battling despair and a desire to quit. 

Sometimes we glorify the events and put a rosey glow on them, not realizing that ordinary men and women like you and me, accomplished a truly extraordinary goal that was to be for God’s glory.  There’s a book that I highly recommend called "The Light and the Glory" by Peter Marshall and David Manuel that you can find on www.Amazon. com and other book outlets.  I read it years ago to myself and then to my children as they came of age.  The picture below is a clickable link to amazon’s selection of these books.

The Light and the GloryPeter Marshall and David Manuel researched the stories of God’s providence in the founding of our nation in detail and present them in a totally captivating manner.  There is a follow up book as well titled, "From Sea to Shining Sea."  Also, each book is available in a children’s coloring book format as well as a children’s reader format.  These books were part of my children’s education process and helped to form a love of history in them.  The books made history come alive and not simply be about facts and figures and memorizing dates.

I spent some time in South Africa some years ago.  Part of the time was on September 11th, 2003.  It was hard to be away from home on the anniversary of such a devasting experience and to be with people that hadn’t experienced it.  At lunch that day with a group of South Africans we discussed the founding of America and of South Africa.  It is one of my treasured memories knowing more of how they felt about their country and how the respected how I felt about mine.  I know that I have many readers who are not from America, and perhaps don’t understand the emotional nature of our pride in our country and what we feel our purpose and calling as a nation is.  So Please bear with us today as we wear our hearts on our sleeves!

My country makes mistakes and often take positions and sets policies that I do not believe in, as does any country and any particular leader.  But we also live by a creed that freedom is worth dieing for and our young men and women will put their lives on the line for the weak, the cowering, the helpless anywhere in the world.  These young people value life and liberty, they make us proud and today is a day to honor their service not just to our country but to a better world.

If you have children, today would be a wonderful day to have them make cards to send to our troops.  They would truly touch the heart of a soldier and be a blessing to both your child and someone else’s child who is away at war.  Or perhaps today would be a great day for you to make a card to send to someone else’s son or daughter to honor their service on your behalf.  There are many organization that send cards to the troops, but if you can’t find one, our church sends care packages and cards each month.  You can send them to: Mountain Vally Community Church 30598 East King’s Canyon Road, Squaw Valley, CA  93675, ATTENTION: Sue Graff and we’ll be certain that they get to a soldier somewhere in the world.

Have a wonderful holiday with your family, say a prayer for a soldier, for the people of Iraq and that God would lead us to a true peace in the world.

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs 4:3-9  When I was a boy at my father’s knee, the pride and joy of my mother.  He would sit me down and drill me: "Take this to heart.  Do what I tell you — live!  Sell everything and buy Wisdom!  Forage for Understanding!  Don’t forget one word!  Don’t deviate an inch!  Never walk awy from Wisdom — she guards your life.  love her — she keeps her eye on you.  Above all and before all, do this: Get Wisdom!  Write this at the top of your list:  Get Understanding!  Throw your arms around her — believe me you won’t regret it; never let her go — she’ll make your life glorious.  She’ll garland your life with grace, she’ll festoon your days with beatuy."

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Dealing With Change & More Digital Clip Art Previews, Tropical, Beach, Summer by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Change… it should be spelled with four letters because most of us consider it a "four letter word" if you get my drift!  Change is stressful.  Change is challenging and unsettling and yet it’s the only consistent thing about life!  The only absolutely predictable thing we have in life is that it will change.

Do you handle change well?  Do you dread it or look forward to it with excitement and anticipation?  I remember watching a special on one of the three networks some years ago, where a study had been done and in-depth interviews had been conducted with a fairly large sampling of people who were over 100 years of age.  They were looking for a clue to help others live longer in the common emotional or personality characteristics that would be found in this group.

The #1 characteristic was adaptability to change and its counterpart, being able to deal effectively with loss.  When interviewed, each related that they had to be flexible and decide to keep on enjoying life after they experienced losses.  They stressed that if you live to be 100 you will have lost virtually everyone you have known and loved and will be left with a younger generation that you might not know very well.  Forming new relationships was key.  It was intriguing to think about.

How can you deal more effectively with change?  Here’s some of my coping mechanisms and I’d like to encourage readers to contribute your own in the comments section.  To post a comment, click on the "comments" link below and it will lead you through the process.

  1. Expect change.  Sounds simple, but we are constantly surprised that change occurs!   Expecting that things can change at any time can help you establish an emotional equilibrium that is stable even when your world is shaking a bit.
  2. Be Thankful.  Live in a constant state of gratefulness for whatever it is that you enjoy in your life, whether it’s a wonderful home, a good marriage, great kids, a job you love.  Enjoy it every single day so that if any one of those blessings are lost or must change, you have never taken them for granted.
  3. Be flexible.  I’ve noticed that rigid people are often shattered by change.  Those who are too set in their ways or unable to adapt often never recover or take a very long time to do so.  Flexible people are those who are able to bend and move to fit the situation.  They can adjust their expectations more quickly and find a "new normal" an begin the process of becoming comfortable with the results of change.
  4. Think positively.  Often our minds immediately decide that the proposed change will have negative impact on our lives.  Instead of going immediately to what you may have lost because of the change, think about what might be gained.  For example:  You have a home you love with neighbors that you are close to and your husband has just been relocated by his company.  If you dwell on what you are "losing" you won’t be open to the potential blessings that you may just be "gaining."  The move is inevitable, but only you can choose whether you will be happy making it or not.  Even the worst events in life can ultimately become a blessing in the long run because of God’s unbelievable ability to bring good out of evil. 
  5. God is in control.  When our world changes we feel out of control.  If we realize that God isn’t surprised by the changes even if we are, it helps us to quiet our hearts and rest in the knowledge that He is in control and more importantly loves us passionately and desires the best for our lives.

When I came home from a relaxing weekend camping, I never expected that our dear Miss Stacey would be leaving THE DAISIE COMPANY because of health reasons.  I didn’t want her to go (as many of you have also indicated!) but I know it’s the right decision for her and her family.  I also know that when anyone who is as key to a company as Stacey is leaves, change is inevitable!  Preparing ourselves to be flexible and patient while those changes occur will help us to not only survive the changes, but come out on the other side of them with an excitement of what can be rather than a hopeless longing for what once was. 

UPDATE, THIS KIT IS NOW AVAILABLE JUST CLICK ON EITHER PICTURE AND IT WILL TAKE YOU TO THE STORE.  On a lighter note, here’s a couple more previews of the kits coming out on Friday:Summer Clip Art, pool, beach, or lakeside fun

This Summer Fun kit has 56 pcs.  and is complete with lots of complimentary papers,  frames, borders, charms and art pieces.  Perfect for summer crafts, scrapbooking, and even for tweener type projects.  I hope you’ll enjoy playing with it!

The final preview for Summer Fun shows the flip flops with and without a decorative ornament (so they can be used for boy or girl layouts).  Each flip flop is entirely separate so you can control their placement.

Summer Fun 1 Beach, pool or lakeside clip art kit previewI’m looking forward to seeing what you create with this kit!  Please be sure to post in the general message board if you post a project to the DAISIE COMPANY gallery as I simply don’t have time to peruse the galleries very often and I don’t want to miss your creative "masterpiece!"

THE PROVERB FOR THE DAY:  Proverbs 27:1-2 "Don’t brashly announce what you’re going to do tomorrow; you don’t know the first thing about tomorrow.  Don’t call attention to yourself; let others do that for you."  The Message.

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

What a Wonderful Weekend in a Beautiful Place, With People I Love (Does Life Get Any Better Than That?)

We extended our planned 3 day camping trip an extra night so we could stop by and spend time with our dear friend Floyd (who lost his wife to Breast Cancer a year ago this month).  We had a marvelous time really connecting with people that we love and enjoy.  We parked next door to our Pastor and his wife and we all have so much fun together.  Our Pastor is a total tease and playful soul so there’ s rarely a dull moment when he’s around. 

campout 1My beloved is in the red shirt, our Pastor (Jim Kennemur) is in the chair with his back to me and his wife Betty is standing up .  This was the picnic area between us and we spent most of our time in our chairs gabbing away here!

The campground was next to Stoney Creek in King’s Canyon National Forest.  It was perfect weather and about 50 or more of us showed up over the weekend.  It couldn’t have been any more perfect weather for the campout.  It got very cool at night (not that we would notice with our heater in our 5th wheel)  I like camping but I didn’t say I liked "roughing it!"

We have normally done some exploring during the day, but this year was a rest and relax trip.  Our daughters, Jacqui (the pilot) and Jennifer (the teacher in training) were with us and Jacqui’s longtime boyfriend Jacob and two young friends of his family made up our entourage.

campout 2

For me, camping is really about connecting with the people I love in the middle of God’s beautiful creation.  Judging by that criteria, it was a perfect weekend!

I finally took a picture of our trailer on one of our trips.  The ponytail belongs to my middle daughter, Jennifer.  There’s no picture of me because I was always behind the camera!  This space was quite tight to get into, but my husband is amazing and manuevering.  You can’t tell from the picture but he has parked it two inches from a tree on the left side rear!

Jacqui and Jacob spent most of their time rough housing.  Jacqui has been trying to "take him down" their whole relationship and still hasn’t accomplished the task.  My final picture is one I snuck of them wrestling and him tossing her around a bit!  They are close to the same size, but it’s really not much of a competition when he decides to win.

campout 3When I get time away, unplugged, I come back recharged and ready to create more.  I have some previews of this week’s kits that I’ll post tomorrow or Wednesday.

Make sure you get some time to enjoy God’s creation and the people you love… whether it has to be somewhere close to home or in some special place!  A vacation doesn’t have to cost a lot to renew your strength and joy.

THE PROVERB OF THE DAY:  Proverbs 25:2-3  "God delights in concealing things; scientists delight in discovering things.  Like the horizons for breadth and the ocean for depth, the understanding of a  good leader is broad and deep."  The Message.

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

We’re Going to be Grandparents!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We were headed out the door to go camping when our oldest daughter, Ariane, called and demanded that all of us be on the phone at once… my heart started to race and I was holding my breath as she said "We’re 6 weeks pregnant!" 

Some people struggle with becoming grandparents thinking somehow it makes them old, but we’re thrilled!  I’d love to be called "Grammy" if I had the option to choose but any name coming off of my sweet grandchild’s lips would be music to my ears.

Got to run, but I just had to tell somebody!!!!  Hugs, AJ

Free Clip Art, Friday Freebie at Daisie Company by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Normally I would be able to take the time to link the Friday Freebie here so that you could go directly to the shop and download it, but Stacey doesn’t have it up yet this morning and I’m getting ready to leave on our camping trip.  There’s still a million preparations!  The first trip out of the summer is the hardest, then with a trailer we just load up fresh clothes and food the next time and we’re off.  We’re hoping for 2 or 3 more trips over the summer.  I find it so refreshing and one of the best things I can do to spark my creativity.

Friday Freebee at DAISIE COMPANYI am linking this image to the DAISIE COMPANY STORE and you can click on it to take you there.  The Friday Freebee is now up.  Please take a moment to go through the pages of new offerings today, there’s lots of neat stuff from lots of great artist!

  For those of you new to Daisie Company, take a look around.  There are forums for sharing designs, templates, cutting files (for those lucky enough to have one of those fabulous computerized cutters) and a whole lot more.  There’s also a section where other Friday Free Bees are located so you can take advantage of a few great offerings.

In my kit there is an invitation you can use for summer barbeques or pool parties, there’s a post card sized image you can use to create your own greeting card, post card or use in scrapbooking for a journaling space.  There’s the Fun in the Sun title and finally there’s a recipe card with a second page for long recipes.  I hope you’ll enjoy!

This is all made out of the art from my "Summer Fun 1" Clip art kit which will be debuting a week from today.

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Even More Exciting News!

For our family anyway… we have a very favorite camping spot.  It’s only about 10 spaces in the entire campground and one of them is long enough for our 28′ fifth wheel, truck and a couple o cars to fit in it.  There’s a wonderful stream that flows down to the backside of the site and then splits in two, tumbling down on either side making an incredible water feature to both look at and listen to. 

Our favorite camping spot

Here’s a picture of the stream below our space.  When I went searching for pictures, I discovered that we never took one of our camping set up!  Isn’t that funny?!  We took pictures all around it but not of our actual camping experience.  It’s a reminder to think about what you want to do with your pictures before/while you’re taking them. 

Guess what I’ll have to do this year?  If I’m going to scrapbook our family’s camp memories I guess I’ll need it.  I want to start painting some camping art to use for scrapping (for me to use for my own purposes) but you will benefit as of course it will make its way to DAISIE COMPANY as a kit at some point.

Last summer when we went to check if everything was okay with our space we were stunned to find that they had blocked it off and made it a walk in camping spot only.  Apparently there had been some damage to the culvert that you drive over the stream on and they probably didn’t want the weight of a trailer or motorhome on it.  We were so sad that we never did end up camping anywhere else last summer.  But this morning we found out from friends that it is open again! 

Here’s hoping you will find a special place of your own to relax and enjoy your family’s company and make treasured memories.

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

I’m Getting So Excited…

Our annual Church camp out is this weekend!  We’re hoping to go up a day or so early (I may have my husband take me up and leave me there alone to do some writing)  I LOVE CAMPING.  When I was a little girl, my parents would take us good, old-fashioned tent camping up in the mountains in Southern California.  My little sister and I would sleep together in an army surplus hammock tent! 

My spirits would start to soar as we climbed above the smog line in Riverside.  The air was much worse then than now.  So bad that we had smog alert days rather frequently and I can recall not being able to catch my breath after playing.  So when we broke through into the crystal-clear pine-scented mountain air something in my child’s heart would begin to turn handsprings!

There’s also something about being "unplugged" in this modern age.  I won’t have the internet, phone, cell phone or television (sorry Daisies I won’t even be able to be on the message board or write my blog!) but I will take pictures.  I’ll have to entertain myself the old-fashioned way, which will consist of getting beaten by every team in the camp at horse shoes, spending time with my Pastor’s wife catching up on our lives, sitting around in my zero-gravity recliner chair soaked in mosquito spray and taking a power nap or two!

Do you have plans to get away somewhere to unwind?  You really don’t have to spend a great deal of money to do so.  The amount of restfulness of a vacation sometimes can be in direct proportion to how much was or wasn’t spent on it.  For me, it seems the more expensive the vacation plans the more I need a vacation from my vacation when I get home. 

My friend Karla Dornacher (www.karladornacher.com) and her husband just came to visit us last month and their summer vacation was a two week road trip with minimal planning and a lot of spontaneity!  They tent camped a little, slept in motels along the way (when it rained) and soaked in the wonder of God’s creation everywhere they went.  They also just enjoyed each other’s company and had as much fun just being together, as being together in some really beautiful places.

I want to encourage you to spend some time really, really relaxing this summer.  If you haven’t camped in a while, maybe that’s an option for you.  If you have children, camping can be a lot of work for the mom (it’s not quite as carefree as you remember it being when you were the child!) but it creates priceless memories for your children.  Exposing them to the wonders of God’s creation, whether in the mountains,at the beach, by a river, at a lake or in the desert is a really life-impacting experience for them.  So Mom, if you hate dirt and bugs, try to put yourself in your children’s shoes and remember how wonderful the world was to explore when you were little!  A little sacrifice on your part can make their eyes truly shine. 

Maybe you can borrow a friend’s trailer or motorhome, or perhaps rent one for a week.  We love camping, but I will confess that we do it in our fifth wheel, so it’s much more like being home in a new place.  Our trailer is an older one that we bought three years ago, and even though we use it very little it keeps aging (and time is making it fall apart) and we keep forgetting to take it down the mountain for repairs… the water tank doesn’t hold water so there’s no hot showers, the refrigerator broke at the end of last summer so we’ll be using ice chests… but we’ll be together, in God’s wonderful world so it will be PERFECT!!!

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Miss Jacqueline “Jacqui” Brennan is Officially a Pilot!

I held my breath when the phone rang this morning while Jennifer, my older daughter shouted, "It’s Jacqui" and grabbed it.  Jennifer had rounded up all the phones so no one but her could answer the call!!  Twice before the calls had come in after her tests and there were sobs on the other end, but this time she was laughing and so excited.  "I’m a pilot!!!!"Jacqui with the #2 "love of her life"

One of the hardest things that any parent must do is let the birdies fly out of the nest, even if they flop to the ground a time or two while they are learning.  Watching her struggle through this process has been excruciatingly hard.  We wanted her to pass the test, but more importantly we wanted her to know everything she needed to know to be a safe and long-living pilot!  So when she failed the first two attempts, we encouraged her to use the time to learn everything possible out of the trial, and reminded her that she will be able to be a better flight instructor for having failed than had she sailed through the first time.  Part of her career path to becoming an airline pilot is to be an instructor (probably at Embry-Riddle) for a couple of years to get the flight hours she needs to apply for the airline job. 

In the end, the victory is all the sweeter because of the pain of the battle.  She’s been so determined.  She’s worked so hard and with such focus that it’s been a delight to observe.   So Saturday, the kids are taking their dad out to an airshow to celebrate Father’s Day and what a celebration it will be.  Unfortunately I won’t get to be there, because I’m speaking at a women’s luncheon.  We’re taping the event though, so afterward I’m going to try to post it here for any of you that are interested in hearing what I sound like!

I wish so much that Uncle Johnny had lived to see today, yet I know in my heart that he saw it before we did.  He knew she would make it and had a confidence in her that that was infectious.  I like to think God lets those that have gone on before peek down on us like spectators at a football game…cheering us on as we struggle in this game of life.  While there isn’t enough clear cut scripture to prove it, this one clearly uses the imagery.  In the chapter that  preceeds it, stories are shared about all the valiant men and women of the bible who ran the race of faith hard and yet didn’t obtain their prize in this life.  "Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. 2 Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. 3 Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.  Heb 12:1-3 NIV"

Whatever you are struggling to obtain, to accomplish or perhaps you are simply struggling to survive a season of difficulty in your life… what ever the difficulty DON’T GIVE UP!   You too are being cheered on.  By us, your friends here on earth.  By those that have gone before you and more importantly by the Lord himself!  Don’t allow youreslf to despair, give up or grow weary in well-doing,   "Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.  Gal 6:9-10 NIV"

Thanks to all of you for your prayers for Jacqui.  She has learned a lot more from this than I could have imagined when we left her at school last September.

Audrey Jeanne Roberts 

 

 

Doing What is “Right” Even When it Feels “Wrong,” by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Recently I was in a discussion with a friend who is in the throes of a divorce.  At the end of the hour-long conversation, he made a comment that has rung in my ears and my heart ever since…  He said, "I chose not to do the right thing because I was sure that she wouldn’t change.  I was sure it wouldn’t change the circumstances.  In retrospect, I should have done what was right just because it was right, whether or not it produced the "right" results." 

That is a very simple, but profound observation and it has relevance to many areas in our culture.  This concept was universally accepted and lived by 40 or 50 years ago, but has somehow become lost in our modern world.  People in our world make decisions that are more based on feelings, individual happiness and the hoped-for outcome, rather than from a sense of universal right and wrong. It can be hard to chose an action that will be difficult and even painful, but sometimes "doing the right thing" means honoring responsibility and duty above my feelings and personal desires.  Sometimes it means choosing a path that seems much harder and longer than if you took the easy way out.  Sometimes it even means teaching someone about right and wrong, whether or not they want to learn the lesson. 

Last week I heard a snippet of a taped assembly at a high school in Boulder, Colorado.  There were 4 or 5 psychology professionals who were addressing the students. They actually told them, "We won’t tell you not to do drugs, drink alcohol or have sex because you’re just going to do it anyway."  So instead, they encouraged them to experiment with drugs and drink alchohol.  They encouraged them to have sex with anyone, of any sex, in any manner that they thought would be fun.  They were completely incapable of telling those students that drugs are harmful, and that they can destroy lives.  

During the question and answer session a young girl came to the microphone and asked, "If I like a boy, but he doesn’t love me, should I have sex with him?  Would you have sex with someone who didn’t love you?"   My heart broke at the question, as I heard the pain in the young girl’s heart that motivated her to ask it.  However, each of them actually giggled and casually said, "Yes, I would have sex with someone who didn’t love me."  They were not able to discern right and wrong choices and confidently tell the kids that wrong choices, lead to bad consequences that you just might have to live with forever.

These psychologists can merrily share their viewpoint with these kids and be their "buddies" for a while, but where will they be when one of them drives drunk and kills themselves, two kids in their car and an entire family on their way to visit their grandparents?  Where will they be when the fourteen year old girl girl they just counseled  has sex with four anonymous boys at a party, then discovers she’s pregnant and doesn’t even know who the father of her child is?  They won’t be there to pick up the pieces of the young man’s life who is now hooked on heroine or methamphetamines because they told him to "experiment responsibly" with drugs that are so addictive a single episode can destroy a life forever.

My husband and I were "old fashioned parents."  We made rules and did our best to enforce them.  We kept to the rules whether or not our children obeyed them, because the rules themselves were established to protect them and prepare them to live a happy life.  We said one phrase so many times that our kids now laugh and can repeat it virtually word for word, "We love you enough to have you not like us right now.  We love you enough to do what is right for you as your parents.  We want to be your friends, (eventually when you are adults) but that will happen only after we’ve done what’s best for you as YOUR PARENTS." 

Many of you who read my blog are very familiar with the bible, but I also know that many of you have never read it for a lot of different reasons.  Often people who have never read the bible, mistake it for a huge, single book that’s overwhelming to even consider reading.  However it is actually a library of 66 books, written over thousands of years, by many authors, from many different cultures who share an amazingly singular view on life and wisdom. 

One of my favorite books in the bible is Proverbs.  It was written for the most part by King Solomon who collected wisdom from the world around him and his personal observations.  Just one example of the relevance to today’s life of the book of proverbs is,  "Better to be poor and honest than a rich person no one can trust.  Prov. 19:1.  Stolen bread tastes sweet, but soon your mouth is full of gravel.  Form your purpose by asking for counsel, then carry it out using all the help you can get.  Gossips can’t keep secrets, so never confide in blabbermouths.  Prov. 20:17-19  (I’ve quoted from The Message, which is a modern version of the bible.  So often when I read these words I realize that for all that the world has changed, we humans aren’t any different than those who lived thousands of years ago!   Proverbs speaks continually of the wise and the foolish.  Wisdom is another way of expressing making the right choices, and foolishness is another word for the wrong choices.

As I love my children and want to protect them from the consequences bad choices will make in their lives, my loving Heavenly Father has given me a handbook to help me as His child.  He set down rules not just so He can boss me around, but to protect me in the same way I want to protect my kids.  In my almost 45 years of following Him I have never once found His instructions to be wrong.  The world around me has constantly shifted in its opinions of what is right and wrong!  Many ways that I was instructed to raise my children when I first became a mother, have now been refuted.  If I had followed them, my children would have been damaged, but instead I followed the principles I learned from God’s word and doing the "right thing" has led to the "right results."  Perhaps it’s because the God that created us also knows what is best for our lives. 

Many times over the years I’ve had to choose to do the "right" thing even when it didn’t feel good.  Almost every time it has ultimately produced the "right" result, but sometimes it hasn’t.  When that is the case it’s usually because someone else in the situation had a free will and chose to go a different way.  But I’ve also learned that when I choose to do right whether or not it works out, I am at peace either way.  Doing the "right" thing often means things like telling the truth even if you’re going to be embarrassed by it, or choosing not to steal even if you know you woudn’t be caught.  Doing the "right" thing sometimes means refusing to cover for your boss when he/she wants you to lie for them knowing it could ulitimately cost you your job.  Doing the "right" thing might mean telling a young couple that having sex might feel good for the moment, but can hurt both of them in the long run and maybe even change the course of their lives forever.

Whether or not you hold to the bible as your standard of right and wrong, I hope you will take time to think over what your standards of wisdom and foolishness are.  What do you KNOW will lead to a better life and what do you KNOW can lead to horrible consequences?  Please don’t be afraid to share those with your children!  Hopefully, you’ll be able to help your children understand that when they choose to do "right" they win no matter what the outcome is.  When they overcome their feelings and choose the right action, you’re teaching them a skill and a discipline that can translate into every area of their life in the future.  Being led by internal standards rather than ever-changing feelings, leads to a stable and peacable life.  Conversely, making decisions based on the avoidance of pain can lead to more and more devastating consequences, as my friend who is in the middle of his divorce has come to understand.  He is realizing that enduring what was in retrospect a little bit of pain, would have been so much better in the long run, than blindly running away from it and heading into the unending, overwhelming fire-storm of pain that is what has come out of his decision.

I think I’m going to add a verse from Proverbs each day to my blog, as a reminder (to myself!) about what is really important in life!  And just maybe you’ll enjoy them too.  Remember, someone wiser than me once said, "Parenting isn’t for cowards!" 

Audrey Jeanne Roberts

We’re Home After a Long Week. by Audrey Jeanne Roberts

Well, for those of you that don't know yet or don't read the message boards at DAISIE COMPANY, my Uncle Johnny died in his sleep early Monday morning.  From the time of his diagnosis to his death was probably somewhere around 2 months, it was painfully fast.

We did get to have some special time with him on Friday when he was still alert.  He really encouraged my daughter Jacqui and told her how proud of her he was and how much more he had wanted to invest in her life, but wouldn't be able.  Uncle John's greatest sadness was all the things he had yet planned to do, but wouldn't have the time to do now.  My Aunt Betty is a very, very strong and capable woman and will miss him very deeply, but will do well.  She is an amazing woman in her own right. 

She was the very first woman FAA maintenance inspector, a pilot and an amazing business woman — and on top of all that she is a fabulous quilt maker/designer.  We had to laugh at her sewing room!  It's piled almost to the ceiling with neatly arranged boxes of fabric (and there's more elsewhere!)  She is a total fabric-aholic. 

My Aunt Nancy was there as well as my Uncle Ralph who goes by "Buddy," whom I had never met before.  Only one brother, Rob Roy, wasn't able to make it there.  I have photos that my Dad's pastor took of the four of them that once we get the car unloaded and the important work urgent items attended to, I'll try to upload to show you. 

Jacqui's checkride had been rescheduled for 9 AM on Monday.  So after learning about her Great Uncle's death, she had to concentrate and get ready for her test.  Unfortunately, she did not pass her first FAA checkride, she did great until about half way through.  Her instructor told her that she was just under too much stress with all that had happened that day and she was confident that she would do fine, to keep her chin up.  She took it really hard, but she will learn something of value from this experience that will make her a better pilot and person in the long run (I can hear her now, "Oh MOM!  You're being such a Pollyanna again!" with a twinkle in her eye!)

We left Prescott, AZ at around 4 PM yesterday and drove until 4 AM, pulled over and napped for a couple of hours and then arrived home at about 8 AM.  Normally it is a 10 hour drive, but we were towing a heavy trailer with Jacqui's "dead" car on it and the wind was heavy and gusty.  It will take me a couple of days to get back up to speed and I may not get any new product into the store for a bit, so be patient with me! 

I hope that you take time to think about your family members that you haven't contacted in a while and take a moment to call or write or make them a lovely card that tells them how much you love and are thinking about them (with all those lovely graphics many of you own!)  Life is short — heaven is close. 

Audrey Jeanne Roberts