• Was It Fate, or Just a Yes?

    fateWhen it comes to the idea of our lives being controlled by Fate, I have very mixed emotions. Some of my friends shrug and say, Stuff happens,” as if life is completely out of their hands. Another one of those phrases is It is what it is,” again implying that we’re ruled by fate. I’ve always had a hard time with that idea.

    I believe our consequences come at the end of a process that begins with our thoughts. What we think about shapes how we feel. Those feelings lead to actions, and our actions create results. In Catechism class and Sunday School, I was taught that we’ve been given the gift of free will, the ability to choose our own path. It’s those choices that determine how our lives unfold.

  • Sunday, Time to Reflect and Reconnect

    Sundays

    Sundays have a rhythm all their own. They mark both an ending and a beginning, a soft pause before the rush of another week. Depending on the season, they can be a doorway to something new or a gentle reminder to wrap up what’s unfinished.

    When I was working full-time, I’ll admit, Sunday nights were my least favorite. No matter how productive I tried to be, the day always slipped away too quickly. By bedtime, I’d feel that familiar twinge of dread. Monday was waiting, and I wasn’t ready to meet it.

    As a kid, Sundays had a very different flavor. The day began with church. I loved getting dressed up and sitting with my mom and sisters, listening to the sermon and wondering how it applied to me. Afterward, we’d change into comfy clothes, and Dad would settle into his red recliner for the “game of the day.” Football, baseball, golf,  he loved them all. Before long, his interest would give way to a nap, and we’d hear the familiar sound of soft snores coming from his chair.

  • Shedding My Inhibitions

    inhibitionsIn the early years, I was a people pleaser. I didn’t want to create waves. I was the teacher’s pet—the one who followed directions, finished assignments early, and made sure my name stayed in good standing. I didn’t argue. I didn’t question. I did what I was told, because somewhere deep down, I assumed other people knew better.

    I didn’t trust my own opinions or ideas. It wasn’t that I lacked them—just that I didn’t think they held much weight. My inhibitions were rooted in the belief that someone else’s voice mattered more than mine. So I made choices by looking around and following the lead of others. When my sister Lisa chose a college, I chose the same one. I didn’t tour campuses. I didn’t compare programs. I just figured, she made a good choice. That’ll work for me too.

  • Vision Pending

    The first time I remember feeling a lack of vision, I was a kid.

    Not little-little—but old enough to notice that other people seemed to have answers I didn’t. Adults would ask, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” and I would feel a familiar tightening in my chest. Not because I didn’t have interests—I had plenty—but because although I could be or do “anything” I wanted, that wasn’t maybe what girls did.

    There was always a reason. The political climate wasn’t right. The college was too far away. That wasn’t practical. That wasn’t what girls did. No one ever slammed a door shut, but although I could be “anything”, did I want to be the ONLY girl?

    When options disappear early, certainty starts to feel comforting. Not limiting—relieving.

    I think that’s one of the reasons I was so drawn to Christian fundamentalism as a teenager and young adult. It offered something deeply appealing to a girl with too many questions and very little permission to explore them: certainty.

    You didn’t need a vision.
    You didn’t need to figure it out.
    You just needed to follow the rules.

    Everything was laid out in black and white—the expectations of leaders, pastors, prophets, apostles, Scripture. The path was clear. And while people still talked a lot about “where your heart was,” the plan itself was already written.

    One of the clearest memories I have is from a summer youth leadership training conference. We were asked to write out a five- or ten-year plan for our lives. I don’t remember which. What I do remember is sitting there, pen in hand, with absolutely no idea what my plan was.

    But I did know the right answer.

    I wrote what I was supposed to want:
    To be a wife.
    A mother.
    To support my husband.
    To raise children in the church.
    To be a Proverbs 31 woman.

    That vision didn’t require imagination. It didn’t require risk. It didn’t even require much decision-making. I didn’t need to know where I was going or what I was doing—only that if I followed God’s plan, everything would turn out okay.

    That was the promise.

    It turns out, that wasn’t meant to be my path.

    Later, when it came time to decide what I wanted to do in college, I did what many people of my generation did: I took a test. The test said teacher. I said, “Great. Sign me up.” Problem solved.

    For years, when anyone asked what I was going to do, I had an answer ready. I was going to be a teacher. And while I liked teaching—and was good at it—I also knew, quietly, that it wouldn’t be forever.

    There was always a sense that something else was waiting.

    After time in the family business, earning my master’s degree, and returning to teaching, that feeling didn’t go away. If anything, it grew stronger. So when circumstances in 2019 didn’t just suggest retirement but actively forced my hand, I surprised myself.

    I was willing.
    I was happy.
    I was relieved.

    Finally, I thought, I’ll get to figure out my vision.

    And I did.

    I decided to become a life coach.

    That part came with clarity, intention, and a genuine sense of yes. But just because you find your vision doesn’t mean the path forward suddenly becomes smooth or simple.

    Which brings me to now.

    I’m still trying to bring that vision to life. I’m still working toward it. And lately, if I’m being honest, the obstacle hasn’t been confusion…so much as… me.

    Sometimes goals and dreams don’t stall because of a lack of vision. Sometimes they stall because of hesitation, self-doubt, distraction, or fear dressed up as practicality. Sometimes the vision is clear—but walking toward it requires more courage than standing still.

    So maybe what I’m experiencing right now isn’t a lack of vision after all.

    Maybe it’s the uncomfortable middle.
    The place where certainty no longer does the work for me.
    The place where I don’t get a script.
    The place where I have to trust myelf.

    If that’s true, then maybe this isn’t failure or regression. Maybe it’s simply another version of becoming—one where the answers aren’t handed down, but slowly built.

    And for now, that will have to be enough.

    Vision pending.

    Who is Lisa

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  • A Journey from Following to Visioning

    visionI recently had the opportunity to write a vision statement, a personal declaration of what I want from life, built around what I would truly love. I’m exploring my passions, trying to discover what would help me create a life of purpose and joy.

  • Nine Years, One Condo, and Zero Rings

    resilienceThe year was 1976. Chris and I had been together for nine years. We enjoyed each other’s company and were good friends. We shared friends and fun times. Chris had a great sense of humor. He was a disc jockey on the local radio station.  He would talk about things we had done together and as he told his story, I could barely recognize it as a place I had been. He was able to make it sound like an enviable experience and one that anyone would like to participate in. 

  • The Perks and Pitfalls of Expectations

    expectationsWe all have expectations, whether we realize it or not. Expectations about ourselves, our relationships, and the world around us. The question is: how do we handle them? Do we set high standards and run the risk of disappointment if things don’t go as planned, or do we eliminate expectations and leave room for surprise and contentment if things go well? I find myself torn between these two perspectives, constantly weighing the pros and cons of each approach.