The Holly and the Ivy (#jammed daily devo, day 348)

December #jammed: Grace, gifted.

Day 348: Rivalry.

“A true friend is closer than a brother.” Proverbs 18:24

Ivy is a climbing vine. Holly is a tree or shrub. I will never hear the “Holly and the Ivy” DECJAM14carol the same way after bearing witness to my two oppositely gifted daughters and their unspeakably close friendship.

David and Jonathan’s friendship is highlighted in this verse. There is something that even they knew, comparing it to something even greater than sibling-ship.

I have a strand of ivy living my house that climbs all over the place. She branches off and takes initiative. She is strong and able and uneasily rattled. As she grows up, the vast depth of her giant heart for Jesus and others is comes into view. I find prayers for others in her desk drawer, and when she says she’s going to “do something about it,” that’s code for, “I”m going to pray about it and I know God hears me.” She is the carefree joy that a child of Christ personifies.

My holly tree, on the other hand, put down strong roots fast. She knows who she is and what she loves and where she’s going …and she’s in absolutely no hurry to get there. We can try to move her along faster or into a different spot where theirs more shade or sun ..but there’s no moving her. She knows Jesus loves her for who she is right now, and has a purpose for her that she can’t derail …so she’s in no hurry …I mean NO HURRY …to get anywhere at all …ever. She calls her friends or writes them notes, and takes on the hurt of others that don’t even know she’s looking out for them.

The friendship between sisters is different than other friendships. They don’t need to talk who they are, they just sit alongside each other the way they are. They are so drastically different, yet both love Jesus so much. They reveal to me how much He loves us all for the way we are. So different. Yet so smashed together for a reason. 

We’re the holly to someone’s ivy, and visa versa. This Christmas, when we’re checking our list twice and stressing out about the Holiday hoopla …who can we add that needs to know they show Him to us?

click to tweet graph, dec jammed

Father, Praise You for sisterly friendship, and the lessons that we learn from observing them. Thank you for placing us in our families so purposefully, and forgive for taking that for granted. Bless our hearts with the love we need to reach out to siblings and friends this Christmas. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

 Get the conversation started by commenting below, and let’s encourage one another as we face life in 2017 armed with grace! 

#greatgrace17

Happy Sibling-ing,

Megs

Get the #jammed Daily Devo sent straight to your inbox each morning, by subscribing to Sunny&80. 

The Holly and the Ivy (#jammed daily devo, day 348)

December #jammed: Grace, gifted.

Day 348: Rivalry.

“A true friend is closer than a brother.” Proverbs 18:24

Ivy is a climbing vine. Holly is a tree or shrub. I will never hear the “Holly and the Ivy” DECJAM14carol the same way after bearing witness to my two oppositely gifted daughters and their unspeakably close friendship.

David and Jonathan’s friendship is highlighted in this verse. There is something that even they knew, comparing it to something even greater than sibling-ship.

I have a strand of ivy living my house that climbs all over the place. She branches off and takes initiative. She is strong and able and uneasily rattled. As she grows up, the vast depth of her giant heart for Jesus and others is comes into view. I find prayers for others in her desk drawer, and when she says she’s going to “do something about it,” that’s code for, “I”m going to pray about it and I know God hears me.” She is the carefree joy that a child of Christ personifies.

My holly tree, on the other hand, put down strong roots fast. She knows who she is and what she loves and where she’s going …and she’s in absolutely no hurry to get there. We can try to move her along faster or into a different spot where theirs more shade or sun ..but there’s no moving her. She knows Jesus loves her for who she is right now, and has a purpose for her that she can’t derail …so she’s in no hurry …I mean NO HURRY …to get anywhere at all …ever. She calls her friends or writes them notes, and takes on the hurt of others that don’t even know she’s looking out for them.

The friendship between sisters is different than other friendships. They don’t need to talk who they are, they just sit alongside each other the way they are. They are so drastically different, yet both love Jesus so much. They reveal to me how much He loves us all for the way we are. So different. Yet so smashed together for a reason. 

We’re the holly to someone’s ivy, and visa versa. This Christmas, when we’re checking our list twice and stressing out about the Holiday hoopla …who can we add that needs to know they show Him to us?

click to tweet graph, dec jammed

Father, Praise You for sisterly friendship, and the lessons that we learn from observing them. Thank you for placing us in our families so purposefully, and forgive for taking that for granted. Bless our hearts with the love we need to reach out to siblings and friends this Christmas. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

 Get the conversation started by commenting below, and let’s encourage one another as we face life in 2017 armed with grace! 

#greatgrace17

Happy Sibling-ing,

Megs

Get the #jammed Daily Devo sent straight to your inbox each morning, by subscribing to Sunny&80. 

Ode To My Parents.

My parents actually are the best.  They’ve stuck with each other through 33 years of marriage, and stuck by me and my siblings our entire lives.  I’m lucky, because I get to hang with my parents a lot.  We live in the same little lake town, and appreciate a lot of the same things in life.  Growing up, I preferred hanging out laughing with my Dad rather than a night out with friends.  In fact, my friends hung out at my house a lot.  Always a lot of laughs.  At 18, I had a streak of independence that couldn’t take me away from home fast enough.  But as an adult with my own family…part of ‘home’ is having them close by.

Mom and I, on a boat, of course.

Mom and I on a boat, of course.

Parenting is an eye-opening experience.  All of the sudden,  the rough patches my personality traveled through to get to this point dissipate to reveal two little tiny people who strongly resemble the very beginning of that journey.   And the reasons my parents ‘parented’ the way they did become clearer, too.

I enjoy laughing at my kids when they do things that remind me of my sister and I when we were little, and so do my parents!  Finally!  I understand why they laughed at me as a kid…I mean, besides the fact that I was extremely entertaining…lol.

Every once in a while, they would just bust up laughing at me…looking at each other as if they shouldn’t be enouraging me, but it was so funny they just couldn’t help it.  The ‘what’ that was so funny was unknown to me at the time.  Now, I totally get it.

Daddy and Me, camping :)

Daddy and Me, camping.

Each time my almost-four-year-old has an attack of the dramatics, I flash back to my own long episodes of tears and strife…because my Mom threw out an old broken Mickey Mouse toy we were attached to…or revolting in my salon up-do for prom, so much so that I re-washed my hair and re-spun it into an acceptable style myself…or driving home from college at 4AM in the morning, emotionally drained over a boy.

Poor Brianne was distraught for an entire week over a fellow pre-school student eluding that she was mean.  “But I’m nice, Mommy…I just don’t know why he said that to me…I’m really a very nice little girl.”  Don’t worry…I’m ready for all of it.

Imagine my delight to overhear my daughter composing her own music video in her room…dancing around with her tutu on, and rotating between a crayon for a microphone and her Hannah Montana guitar.  I laughed so hard I had to run to the bathroom to pee, because I used to think I was the next backup dancer for Janet Jackson.  I took dance for 15 years, and practiced in front of the mirror in my room every day.  Blasting music and singing at the top of my lungs…feet pounding on the floor as I perfected my moves…my parents caught me on video falling off the top of our boat dancing once…the laughs they must have had.

“Just wait until you have kids…”  my parents would say.  It’s totally true!  I never expected to actually have a little ‘mini’ me.  She has imaginary friends… giggle attacks…is fiercely competitive at an unnaturally early age.  Which adds to her frustration with herself when she can’t pick up on something new right away.  (We’re finally enjoying tricycle rides down the road instead of her kicking and throwing it because she can’t figure it out.) All these things are like pulling pages out of my own playbook.

Grandma and Grandpa have some good laughs over their little nuances, all the while glancing at me with an all-knowing look.  They’ve got to be thinking…’Oh, man…now you know how we felt dealing with you…just wait until they are teenagers!’  It’s a privilege to be able to share these moments with my parents, and a lesson to me to relax about a lot of things…because in the end it’s all just good comedy.

Thanks, Mom and Dad.  When I look back at my childhood, it’s filled with lots of laughter and fun times together.  I have you to thank for that.  Even now, you keep me focused on what’s most important in life.  As my face-painted little sister once sang into the video camera…don’t worry, be happy.  My own daughter’s nightly giggle attacks were played out at our dinner table in Broadview Hts. not so long ago.  Having you right here to share life’s journey with me and my family is awesome.

My Dad and his Granddaughters

The girls with Grandma at Disney on Ice

To all of you out there that feel the same appreciation for your parents…you should tell them.

Happy Mini-Me’s!

Megs