Posts Tagged Bible

What I learned from football…

…is that nearly everyone is a coach [Monday Morning Quarterbacks, you know who you are].  This is my final take-away from watching the entire season of games.  Last Sunday’s Super Bowl ended my first complete NFL season of watching, following and learning.  I’m obviously far from being an expert like you, but are not most of us who lack the history of EVER being an NFL coach?  I posted to Facebook immediately following the Hawks loss to New England, something short – ‘Great game Hawks and Congrats Patriots,’ but couldn’t believe the feed posted relating to the Hawk’s losing the big game that demanded immediate termination of Pete Carroll.  Those same individuals (guilty of Monday Morning quarterbacking) generously gave away what other play shoulda (should have) happened that coulda (could have) and woulda (would have) guaranteed a repeat of the Hawks winning another championship game last Sunday.  [Apparently, I am surrounded by seers and clairvoyants.]  Do you Monday Morning quarterbacks really think Coach Carroll failed to consider ALL the play options?  It would seem a great many of you non-coaching experts like to coach from the sidelines of the social network.  And since you are clearly clairvoyant, have some confidence in your abilities to foresee outcomes while also having the cojones to put your ability to use publicly so you can gain some credibility and so we can avoid the shoulda, coulda, woulda conversations in the future.  Capisce?  I’m just another fan (not a Monday morning or any other day of the week quarterback), who suggests that perhaps your lack of confidence in your own team assessments is more of an indication that you’re symptomatic for possibly being passive aggressive since you’re a heckler style of coach, rather than taking your team management and play concerns directly to the coach personally…

seahawks

So should I suggest, “Shame on Mr. Carroll for failing to consider ALL the social network suggestions?”  No, but then, I also really doubt that Pete Carroll suffers from any level of short-shortsightedness or he wouldn’t be allowed to continue coaching.  Right?   In several articles, Coach Carroll took full responsibility for making the call on what final play the Seahawks attempted.  “I made the decision,” Carroll said. “I said, ‘Throw the ball,’ and we went with the play that we thought would give us a chance to get in the end zone. We had great match ups for the call that we made, and it didn’t work out. They made a better play than we did.”  (O’Connor, ESPN,  2015) And Pete Carroll has the experience and credibility required as a paid coach to make that determination of which play to execute and when.  The play didn’t win the game and that was disappointing, but the majority of us were NOT on the field next to him to offer our not-so-news-worthy insight and therefore, failed to see the ENTIRE picture of what lead to Coach Carroll’s determination.

I noticed that In addition to you Monday morning quarterbacks, apparently all  you wannabe coaches are really coaches masquerading in a number of day-jobs, like entrepreneurs or working for ‘the man.’   Who would have thought that there are so many of these professionals who are really coaches in-disguise?  But even more surprising was that some of these individuals have the time to successfully do so many jobs  – your paid position, your football analysis position and then also act as an unpaid wannabe coach – in addition to having families.  Wow!  Y’all are setting the bar pretty high for simpletons like me who just want to be entertained watching a fantastic team who wants to win a game, but then I’m really just another fan who believes that those who are in the actual position of Coach – like Pete Carroll – he probably has the required qualifications to…well…Coach.  So I propose instead of coaching from the sidelines like a heckler, confront the Hawk’s GM John Schneider and prove that you’re more qualified than the team’s current coach because your coaching expertise is clearly under-utilized as your wannabe coaching from a social network’s sidelines might indicate.  Best of luck obtaining the position and I’ll look for your name on next season’s roster.  Go Hawks!

If your ability as a clairvoyant suggested the majority of this was going to be sarcastic, congratulation for reading the obvious.

Do you also find Monday morning quarterbacks annoying?  Please explain.

~Jenn

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Engaging with people is so much work

Im not a product

Friendships require work and openness.  I’ve been very guarded where friendships are concerned because I have been open to a fault with a few who I believed were ‘safe’ only to regret sharing when I experienced their over-developed sense of superiority due to their own perfection, which apparently made it allowable for them to judge me.  In WA, I had a smallish group of females I trusted with whom I’d go out for a girls night like for drinks and music or a movie, but upon our relocation to NV, I’ve been closed-off to making more friends.  Knowing our time here is short-lived, I’ve failed to pursue making friends with anyone beyond an acquaintance level because my outlook has been, “We won’t be here long enough to make it worth the effort.”  Shame on me.  No, BIG SHAME ON ME and please forgive me for not bothering to be friends with you.

For many years when we committed to going-out with, for the purpose of cultivating friendships with other couples, we were always on time and to cancel last minute was never an option.  Although we were consistently on the receiving end of other’s flakiness because for some and you know who you are, being a flake is a lifestyle choice.  Emergencies happen and those are excusable, but failing to plan, “Our plans slipped my mind,” is NOT a reasonable excuse when you know the date of said plans.  Maybe you commit, but by committing perhaps you should always provide this disclaimer, “I commit right now, but what I really mean is I’m selfish and I’ll cancel at the last possible moment never giving a thought to any arrangements you might make in the hope that I might show-up and grace you with my presence for the evening, when my regretful decline could have given you an opportunity to do something else,” is what you should say.

But then after some reflection of last year, I have clearly become a poster-child for flaky as I have became somewhat of a borderline agoraphobic.  My home is my safe and happy place.  I get up.  I shower.  I read my Bible and pray.  I take care of our pets.  I exercise.  I bake goodies. I drink wine and even catalog it in my little black book of Wine Notes.  I read books and I might play an Ap for fun on my iPad.  I run errands as needed.  These activities became MY own little self-created-safe-zone when I determined that 15 minutes from home is the furthest and safest acceptable distance I can be from home at any time.  Our church’s small group fits that, but I’ve rarely attended any more.

Being budget-conscious and to save money, we quit using full-time air-conditioning and as a result, our home becomes suffocating hot during summer.  If it’s 108 degrees outdoors, it’s around 87 indoors and multiply that if it’s humid.  Just a touch hot and with MS, the heat renders me useless until the AC comes on for a couple of hours each morning and then again in the evening and when the AC comes on, I’m in recovery mode, which has been my ongoing excuse for not attending our small group except that now that we’re out of summer, there is no viable excuse for my non-attendance, which means that I evolved into what I detest and became a flake!  Our small group from church started a new study last week and I attended, but came home feeling convicted for many things one of which seems to appear in red flashing bold letters, “Making excuses for not attending our small group when I can during these cooler months,” or was that flashing in red just for me?

So now that I’ve explained why I have become what I’ve become, I’m actively working to change my habits.  It’s not a New Year’s resolution per se as my followers may have already read about in https://wordpress.com/post/81313185/142/ but I guess I’m reaching-out as a means of publicly recognizing I must stop my hermit-like habits, which also equates to fostering friendships and getting together for things like coffee or being friendly instead of remaining holed-up in a book or a game Ap.  Step 1 was the easiest in recognizing I had a problem.  It’s the next stuff that’ll present the biggest challenges for me because I can be very content with operating within my little world.  Yes, I know it’s not healthy, but it’s comfortable and that’s become the biggest challenge for me with our new small group study: to go beyond my comfort-zone.  I’ll keep you updated in how I fare through this what I suspect will be an uncomfortable process.

Do you have a comfort zone?  Do you have a negative habit?  Did you create a positive habit to replace your negative habit?  Or how did you overcome it?

~Jenn

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Panic, averted, not ave… , averted

I received a call this morning pertaining to the fact that there would not be a shipment of my MS medication, although, as of yesterday afternoon, I would receive it Thursday.  So, when the organization called again today and said there would be an indefinite delay for shipping me my medication, I panicked.

Jenn’s game plan:  1. Panic.  2. Panic more 3. Repeat.   When Instead, this should always be my game plan:

Prayer

However, I did successfully talk myself off of the ledge, took a deep breath and determined I needed a Peppermint Infused Mocha.  So I made one.  Peppermint Infused Mocha:  Mix 1/8 cup half and half with 1/2 to 1 tbsp chocolate syrup, add 1 soft peppermint, then add 1 cup of hot coffee and stir until peppermint is nearly melted.  Enjoy.  And I did, but then I started to panic again.  Peppermint Infused Mochas provide only a minimal level of distraction and comfort and after 4 of these this morning, I determined I should come-up with another game plan.  That’s what Russell Wilson would do.  But then my defeating thoughts started again…  what if I don’t get my medicine this week?  Will the delay in taking my injections cause my MS to again relapse?  Will I end up in a wheelchair again?   This is my ongoing problem:  I go from zero to apocalyptic in 0.001 seconds.  Until roughly two years ago, I was never a worrier because I took comfort in knowing that regardless of what I did, there were many things out of my control and back then I easily let-go of things and stepped aside for God to control.

It’s been interesting and eye-opening when I think back through recent years and review my decision-making where health is concerned.  For the last decade, when fall arrived, I ALWAYS got a flu-shot.  But last September, I put my tradition on hold as I questioned whether I was trusting God to keep me healthy or putting my trust in a vaccine.  I know that God gives us common-sense and common-sense says to get a flu shot because rumor has it that the current flu-strain is awful.  So I should get a shot.  But considering we’re on a very tight budget, I shouldn’t get a flu-shot, but can I afford not to?  Which says, get a flu-shot, but does that say that I don’t trust God with my health?   But then, but this, but that, and the list goes on and I go back and forth.  I fully understand that I still lack control of nearly everything, but here I am and as always I am an ongoing WIP (Work-In-Progress) to immerse myself completely in trusting God.

Trust me

It’s become obvious to myself that I trusted God years ago to get me out of the wheelchair and he did that.  Praise God for such a wonderful blessing, but I’m ashamed to admit that my trust is lacking with everything else, like getting us moved back to Washington and keeping our own little family and critters healthy.  I’m also ashamed to admit that I have this mentality that because I was the recipient of such an amazing blessing when God allowed my health to improve so drastically, that I do not qualify for any additional blessings.  But I know better than to think like that because we are promised in Ephesians 2:8-9 NIV that, “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not by works so that no one can boast.”

Eph289

 Jesus dying on the cross, forgave what I did and what I will do as long as I confess.   Grace is about what He did and that cannot ever be earned. When Jesus died on the cross for me and everyone else, that was never earned, but I still received that precious gift.  Therefore, I have to believe that receiving healing was also not earned and that I just need to rest in peace that regardless of whatever challenges may come up for me or my family, his grace will sustain.

~Jenn

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