Dog tired? Have some tea.

Are you feeling dog-tired? That all consuming work and mental push has finally exhausted you? If so, then it’s time to sit down for a little bit. Have some tea. Yes. Tea.

Tea is a drink that requires you to slow down. Heating the water takes time. Letting the tea steep takes time. Allowing the tea to cool enough to drink takes time (unless you pour it into your saucer to drink from). The slower pace of tea drinking allows us to breathe deeper, to sit down and contemplate the day. Sounds nice, right?

But what if you are a coffee drinker? Like me! Maybe you can relate to this…The coffee pot is full of fresh coffee, you grab some creamer, then pour in the coffee on top in a to-go cup, and there, it’s ready to drink and you can go about your day and get stuff done. You can repeat this whenever you have an empty cup or want to warm up the cold coffee that has sat for a bit because you were so busy doing, doing, doing. Yep, this is me. I love my coffee. But I also love the calmness of tea.

When I was a little girl, my mother’s best friend was a tea drinker. Every afternoon, you would know that the kettle was on and at least once a week (although in my mind it felt like every day!) my mom would head over to Rose’s place for a cup of tea and friendship. I remember going along and getting to have my own cup and a little bag of my favorite tea, and I would dunk it in the hot water to make my tea. The two women would visit about all sorts of things and just let go of the stress of the day. It is a wonderful memory and reminder to take the time to sit down. To take the day’s load and let it go over a cup of tea. I think this is a new goal of mine. Slow down and relax over a nice cup of tea.

 

 

Encouraging Connections…what if?

“But the soul will show up only if we approach each other with no other motive than the desire to welcome it.” -Parker Palmer  (A Hidden Wholeness, 2004, p.64)

These words by Parker Palmer speak to my heart and hopefully to you also. This is the authentic love so many of us treasure in our closest friends. Our closest loved ones. This is the way kindred spirits make us feel. No motives. Just an openness, and realness, that bring us closer and help us feel safe.

In middle school, I was invited to join a group called Natural Helpers. It was a national program that trained students and peers to support their fellow classmates. Natural Helpers were chosen through student survey on who in their school they felt they could talk to. Who they felt safe with. I was new to the school district. I hadn’t grown up with all my fellow classmates. And yet, somehow, I was chosen by them to be their support. An honor I am still humbled by.

In college, as a first year student, again, I was chosen by my fellow dorm students as a peer they would go to if they needed support. The university had their own college level of Natural Helpers that I was invited to be apart of. Humbled and willing to take this work on, I decided to expand my support by signing up as a residence hall manager (Dorm Mother?). My second year of college, I was again invited to attend the college group of Natural Helpers. (It was at this training, I met Andrew, and my world has never been the same!) Called by my residents to be a support for them, to listen when they hurt, to encourage them when they thought of giving up, was again, an honor.

It is this type of support structure we need in the world, in our communities, our schools, and our organizations today. It’s needed by adults. It’s needed by students. It’s needed by leaders. And by the strangers.

Recently, my eldest son was writing a paper about what three major skills his Generation Z would need to succeed in the future. He worked through the first two, Communication (in all forms, but mostly speech paired with visual forms) and Money Management were two specific life skills that he felt were absolutely necessary for future success. For his third skill, he chose something different. He wrote about the skill of Connecting. Connecting with others to build a support system to overcome the challenges of daily living. His reasoning was that it is through relationship and the support of each other, that we can be healthier and live more fully.

He is absolutely right!

So how are we called to encourage this skill? To support everyone in their ability to connect with others in real and authentic ways? Social networks have widened our opportunities to connect, however, how authentic have we become? I would argue that the online networking has limited the real connections with others.

SO, how will we ensure the Generation Z and future Generations understand the value of real relationships and know how to build systems of support?

It must be taught! It must be. WHO will be our movers of this? It has to be the Generation that came before our systems of supports dramatically changed. Grandparents are an amazing current opportunity for teaching our younger generations and we are ignoring their wisdom. Just look at the amount of views Betty White gets with her different videos and memes? What if we pulled in their knowledge? If we were to ask for their wisdom, and encouraged them to teach our generations how to connect in authentic ways? It could be so cool! I wonder what it would look like?

What if???

Deuteronomy 4:9
“Only be on your guard and diligently watch yourselves, so that you do not forget the things your eyes have seen, and so that they do not slip from your heart as long as you live. Teach them to your children and grandchildren.”

Carrie

#shineon

Magnificent Love…

 Andrew and I celebrated our anniversary this week. Twenty amazing years of ups and downs, and ups again, and downs again. We both have learned a few things about marriage, although we’ve learned a few more things about faith in the process of maintaining our relationship through the mountain climbs and valleys. Here’s a little of our learning.

We have learned that we cannot find God by searching in the dark for Him. Hoping that God will be there whenever things go wrong. No, instead, we have learned that we have to find our light within and encourage each other to stay the course, have faith that all will be well. We have learned that God is never hidden (even when we feel it to be so) but rather, He is apart of us that we need to call on, ALWAYS! Even in the glorious goodness of the days.

God climbs our mountains, celebrates the top, and falls down with us when we tumble. Early on, this learning was tough for us as a couple. When Andrew and I were ready to be parents, we were overjoyed at how quickly we became pregnant. We told our friends and family, we were so excited. Then, our bottom fell out when miscarriage took our first shared creation. It was heartbreaking. For both of us. Andrew grieved. I grieved. We struggled to connect after that. Looking back, I know God was with us. At the time, I felt we were left alone and broken. God directed us though. We decided to finally find a church to go to. It was the music there that helped me heal. Andrew healed too. God was there, as is easily revealed now, many years later.

We’ve had many other downs, all that feel so dark, but each time, God leads us back up to the top. Some say Redemption. Some say Grace. I say it’s God’s Magnificent Love.

We are never alone. Believe this and you have faith. Faith will hold you through the bottom steps up that tremendous mountain. It will guide you to keep climbing, all the way up to the top. The magnificent top! There will be falls and stumbles. But God is gracious enough to help us back up. And He forgives our doubts, fears, and sinful hearts. Just like that. Do not fear falling from the top. The next mountain you climb will certainly be greater and even more glorious. Find the faith to keep climbing. AND Thank God for that strength of faith. Share His magnificent love by sharing your mountains with others (your stories). Your climb will be a support for others in their own climbs.

Push on. Celebrate with God in every step you take on your mountains and in your valleys. Live for the climb and most importantly, treasure God’s Magnificent Love found at the top.

All is well with my soul. Blessings to you.

Carrie Ruth

#shineon

 

Be Joyful in Hope…

The other day, I was reminded of a student who changed me. Years ago, when I was still considered a “young” teacher, a refugee student joined my classroom. He was a beautiful second grader with bright shining eyes and a smile that spread across his entire face. It wasn’t first apparent that he was a joyful student. No, initially, I thought he was a trouble maker and a behavior problem. I was wrong. Truly wrong.

Unfortunately, back then, I didn’t understand how important my teacher decisions were to the success of every student. No, I thought students came to me and I was in charge of making sure they learned the curriculum. I wanted to be influential to student learning, but I didn’t always know how (I am still learning this, fifteen years later!). I also didn’t believe I could actually teach ALL students to learn. I had what is called a “fixed mindset” (Dweck, 2006), on what I could do as a teacher. Additionally, I didn’t necessarily believe that every child could learn because of some limitation or other. This is called a deficit-mindset and appears whenever a teacher places a limitation on a student for any perceived reason (economic, ability, personality or other). It sounds like this, “If Johnny could only be fed well every morning, he could learn.” or “If Susie didn’t have a disability in Reading, she would succeed.” What it is, is an excuse for the teacher to focus less on Johnny or Susie, because they just won’t make it due to…_____(fill in the blank with the limitation of choice). I did this. And I am so sad I had this mindset.

So here’s the story.

This amazing eight year-old student, who we will call John, had lived much of his life with his Mom and siblings in an African refugee camp. Relief services from a Christian organization helped them immigrate to the US to flee their war-torn country. John joined my classroom in the Fall of his second grade year. He spoke little English but knew words for the bathroom, and outside, and food. On the first day, John did okay. He sat like his peers in a chair, he watched them closely to see what to do. He did okay. On the second day, John fell apart. And so did I.

He was provided English Learner services for almost three hours a day starting right away in the mornings. He then joined our classroom and had to transition into our Literacy block. The second day of school, our class was practicing Literacy Centers where students worked through different types of reading or writing activities. It was a typical second day of school and students were doing fine. Until John entered the room. When he came in, he slammed the door behind him. When he saw the kids all in different places compared to the day before, he became visually upset, crouched down into a ball, and started to moan very loudly. He then began to rock back and forth. I was shocked. I was worried. I was frustrated.

I went to him, rubbed his back, talked calmly to him. I tried to gently calm him. At the same time, I tried to manage a classroom of 28 other eight and nine year-old students. They were so confused and worried for John. Some came to ask what was wrong. Some asked if he was going to stop moaning. Some covered their ears. Some just stared. Recess came. Thank goodness. John agreed to go outside. He played well. But when he returned, he returned to his moaning crouch position. I continued my comforting to John and teaching everyone else from afar. What else could I do? Ten days of this teaching and I was ready to quit.

The day I found out I was pregnant (with son #2), I had to chase after John so he wouldn’t run away. He cried in my arms in the middle of the hallway. I cried too. (Every night. Every day.) That same day, I told my principal I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t teach him and my students anymore. She listened. And I know as she listened, she planned to find support. I wish I had gone sooner to her. I wish I hadn’t been so afraid to say, “Please help me.” We educators are so afraid to admit we don’t always have the answers. We are so afraid to be evaluated as an ineffective teacher. We are so afraid of our own limitations. (or maybe it’s just me?)

The following week, a para-educator followed John all day, every day, recording all his behaviors. For a good three weeks, she worked along with him during his EL service time, and sat next to him in the classroom, rubbed his back when he was in his moaning crouches, played soccer with him at recess, and built a relationship with him. He started to do better. But then she got tired and overwhelmed. Sadly, she quit. John grieved. I grieved. My class grieved. Things got worse again, even with a new para-educator.

There was a lot I did wrong for John during this time. But there is one thing I did right. I PRAYED.

And God listened. He heard me calling for help. He sent me a sign. And here is where I have learned to “Be Joyful in Hope” (Romans 12:12).

At this time, Andrew and I decided to switch churches. We decided to visit a few churches before making a decision to join any one church. The first church we went to seemed like a great fit. We loved the pastor’s message, the fellowship with members, and they even had a young families group! That day, Andrew took our son (we only had 1 at that time) to the nursery and I picked him up after. When I went to pick him up, I heard a loud, “HI TEACHER!” from inside the nursery. I looked in and saw not only my son, but my eight year-old student John, on the floor playing together. GOD!!! I weep still.

From that day on, I and John connected. We found a way to communicate in smiles, gestures and some English. We hugged and laughed. He learned and I learned more! God knew what my heart needed to learn. That I am the one who needed to let go of my expectations. I was the one who needed to be better. I was the one who needed to change. I was the one who needed to adjust, not John. I have taught with John in my mind and heart every day since. NO student is unable to learn. ALL STUDENTS ARE ABLE TO LEARN. And if any educator says differently, then I pray for God to send them a sign too.

John moved with his family to Iowa later that school year. I never learned how he did, but I pray often that he smiles daily and is full of a hopeful future. He was such a bright light that I didn’t even see until God helped open my eyes.

Here is more of Romans 12. Verses 9-12:

‘Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good. Be devoted to one another in brotherly love. Honor one another above yourselves. Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervor, serving the Lord. Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.’

My prayers go to the teachers still in need of a sign. My prayers go to the students who feel no one knows their hearts. My prayers to each of you, that you may feel encouraged knowing that God answers prayers.

Carrie Ruth

#shineon

 

When I am 100 years old…

When I am 100 years old…

I will walk slowly,  soak in pink sun.

I will sit, listen to rain,  drip-drop into puddles.

I will close weary eyes,  breathe the scent of snow.

I will sip lemonade,  outlast the sourness on my face.

I will catch falling leaves,  rub weathered fingers across brittle edges.

When I am 100 years old…

I will laugh at what strikes me funny.

I will smile when I am happy.

I will cry when I feel the need.

And, I will frown when I am sad.

When I am 100 years old…

I will read,  on and on and on, until my eyes tire.

I will write,  with love and life and hope.

I will listen,  with understanding and encouragement.

I will question,  without fear of judgement.

When I am 100 years old…

I will still be me,  living and loving authentically, just as I do, today.

-Carrie Ruth Thonstad

#shineon

Worn out and smiling!

Yes, it’s been a couple months since I’ve written here. Honestly, it’s been a challenge to feel confident that my words might be giving anyone a moment of joy. That’s what happens sometimes. We doubt. We lose hope. We limit ourselves.

I’ve been an educator for twenty years. More if you count the years I worked in daycare and baby-sitting (which for me was a serious business!). Every year the same cycle of never-ending to-do items, overwhelming schedules, and unlimited events begin to arrive altogether at the same time which I will call the “Flood Time”. You know…when all of the never-ending work just keeps rising with no end in sight! It is that time. Right now.

With a return to the classroom, I have been building all year to this point where my students are putting the learning altogether to reflect and see what they have accomplished. All year, I have carefully considered which lesson, which strategy and which student task will guide each student to understanding. Every day, the planning and delivery need to blend in just the right way to build upon the day before. Every class time, careful observation and management of the student relationship needs to occur or the final outcome of enhanced student learning is lost. This is like building an ark.

Noah was told to build an ark. He was given the instructions, and he delivered as God asked. Every single day was spent preparing the ark, building it in stages, carefully and purposefully to ensure the ark would not sink when it was time. He built the ark. He managed his family in the work. He filled the place with pairs of animals. There is no doubt in my mind that through it all, he was WORN OUT! But then the flood came! There wasn’t time to rest, there was more work to do. Every. Single. Day.

This is what my current reality is. WORN OUT! Every. Single. Day. Maybe you can relate. Maybe you can’t. Some of us do a really amazing job of balancing all that work and finding ways to rest in the midst of it. I would love to hear how you do it! But for the rest of you who maybe feel the same as I do right now, here’s some HOPE.

Noah worked and worked and worked. Then the flood came and Noah worked some more. He didn’t rest. He didn’t quit. He maybe doubted. He maybe lost hope (especially near the 40th day and the doves returned empty-beaked!). He maybe started to put limits on what he could do. BUT then the Sun shone. The waters receded. The doves brought the olive branch. AND you can just imagine Noah’s face. Turned to the sun, with a huge grin spreading across his face, Noah sees God’s rainbow. WOW!

For educators, that is what Summer vacation feels like right? Like all the effort and hope for our students was all worth it. That while another year is ahead (and we are already thinking about it), we can now let the Flood recede, let our breath out, and we can accept that while we are WORN out, we can SMILE knowing that our efforts are completely worth it. Who knows what each of our rainbows (students) will accomplish as they move up another year. We do know that we worked our tails off trying to get them another step closer to their bright and shining spot in this world. AND it is worth it!

Shine on my educator peeps! Worn out and Smiling along with you!

-Carrie Ruth

 

Mediocrity…why?

Ok, so I think everyone agrees that mediocrity isn’t cool. It’s mundane, boring, sameness, routine. I have come to the realization that accepting the current reality is the worst kind of mediocrity there is. Why would we ever be okay with things as they are right now in our life? And, I am not speaking about the current reality of our political climate, social injustices, or environmental unrest. No, I am talking about our apathy in the personal now. The limits we place on ourselves by going through the motions, saying the same lines, holding onto the same, just for the sake of maintaining the similar outcomes. It’s the easy way to do life, and requires no new learning. AND I AM GUILTY OF THIS!

Sometimes, we need a shake up, a wake up, a nudge (or a push!) towards passion, energy, excitement, and CHANGE. Scary…that one word. And everyone is afraid of it to some extent. There are just people who have built in strategies which help them embrace the change, to go with it and learn in the midst of it. The ones who haven’t, have accepted mediocrity. They’ve been allowed to accept mediocrity. The people we love, the people we connect with (friends, colleagues, peers, teammates), we’ve allowed them to accept the mediocrity in their lives.

Here’s how I know…when we talk to each other, what is the first question we ask? “How are you?” Right? Well, what is the expected routine response? “I’m fine, how are you?” Yep. It’s routine and it’s mundane and it opens a conversation, but it limits our depth. What if we opened with, “What amazing thing are you thinking about today?” or “What made you get excited today?” or even “What did you wish happened today? I wonder what people would do if those were the daily unexpected questions we all presented to each other? How much more would we become engaged with each other? How much more would we encourage each other to find our passions and use them daily? Can you imagine it?

I do. I constantly wonder what a business, school, or church could do if the depth of engagement was less about the routine and more about the authentic passions and energy we all have (if we let it shine). I’ve seen it only in the individual realm, or in teams I’ve worked with. A peer of mine loves photography, but only ever “played” on the weekends. It wasn’t until a group of us asked her about her photos and she began showing them, that she began to get more serious and while it’s still a hobby, she talks about it. AND when she does, she shines!

Authenticity wipes mediocrity away. When we can place a little bit of who we are into the work we do and/or the change that we fear, we become more engaged. We become more excited. We begin to open our minds to the possibilities. We step more lively away from mediocrity.

I guess what I am saying is this: What have you become robot like in your life? What if you do it different? What if you don’t?

I, for one, am going to try it a little different. When I write those doctoral papers, instead of writing them as regurgitation of learning, I will fully engage in the work to ensure my professors know that I learned the content, AND that I have embraced the learning by showing application into my life. It will take more time, more effort, but it’s REAL. It’s Connected. It’s Authentic. If I don’t, it’s just mediocrity.

#shineon

-Carrie

 

Use your “Mommy Eyes”…

When my eldest son was just a little tyke, he told Andrew to “use his mommy eyes” to find whatever Daddy was searching for. At the time we laughed, and it became a quote that resurfaced every time someone searched for the keys, a missing shoe, or the TV remote control! Reflecting on this, I think there was something my son was touching on that I didn’t originally understand or consider.

Look closer, and observe what might be hidden in plain sight. It is natural for me to observe and reflect on what I see around me. I just didn’t understand that not everyone sees like me. I have a perspective all my own. My son, unknowingly, was trying to help his Dad see things through my eyes, in my perspective. It reminds me of the saying, “You don’t know what it’s like for another person until you walk in their shoes.” The thing is, I believe it’s more than just walking in another’s shoes. You’ve got to see the world through their eyes.

I have some wonderful siblings and cousins who were genetically gifted with great height. My mother is shorter in stature and I remember her telling these tall fellows, “Come down to my level and you’ll see what I see!” She used to joke about it, but again, it was about getting to see the world from another person’s perspective.

I think my point for you is to consider the value in looking from other’s perspectives.  Judging someone isn’t going to help you feel connected, nor gain joy. And it’s not about seeing another’s viewpoint to try and change minds about whatever is today’s current news. No, it’s about being open to the fact that I don’t see the way you see, and you don’t see the way I see, but I want to. Because, people are cool! Connections (real connections) with people encourage joy. People who are authentic and real by giving you a look into their worlds, help you learn. They help you consider better ways to connect, for future friendships, and more importantly, for yourself.

Earlier this week, a student was working on a poem that included figurative language about how fences hold us back from ourselves. She chewed on her lip, gave me a look, blew her hair up, and said, “It’s like pretending not to care when you really do.?. Right?” Getting to sit and see her thinking, processing, frustration, and eventual consideration, was the absolute best! I was definitely looking with my mommy eyes (teacher eyes), and I can’t imagine how much I would have missed if I hadn’t seen that silent observation.

But, it’s not just with people. In nature too, and all around us are viewpoints we never see. Today, as I rode in the car, and Andrew drove, I looked out and saw a very large nest in the trees along the river. I had never seen it before, although we drive the same route every weekday. When we saw the bald eagle perched in a nearby tree we knew what the nest was for. Seriously cool! Again, grateful for the reminder to look with my mommy eyes!

I urge you to take the time to look with your mommy eyes (You can call it whatever you want! Just do it!)! I promise, you will step lighter, having benefited by seeing things you never saw quite the same way before!

I can’t wait to see what I get to look at tomorrow!

~Carrie  #shineon

 

“I will love you forever, FEROCIOUSLY!”

We love our children. But sometimes parents forget to love with the ferociousness required. We enjoy the baby snuggles, toddler giggles and tempers, and even the young child sass. Then all of a sudden, the babyhood is gone and a kid has appeared right before our very eyes!  During the early years, you can understand the ferocious love. It’s the type that you have when you imagine someone snatching your baby when your back is turned. Or when your little urchin somehow unbuckles his car-seat belt buckles (all of them!) and stands up while you are speeding down the interstate! Yeah, it’s that kind of love. Mama and Papa Bear love, well, kind of.

There is a difference though, in this type of love I describe. While there are absolutely strong emotions tied to ferocious love, there is also a quiet, calm to this love. The ferociously loving parents observe their children. They listen to what is said, and isn’t said. They ask questions that might not have answers, because the child has yet to even consider the thought. This requires full engagement on the part of the parent. Carefully paying attention to how the child is growing, changing, and becoming independent.

Independence isn’t just a happenstance. It is an education in homes with ferociously loving parents. Children are not left to learn by chance the route to respect, to responsibility, to kindness and to gratitude. The instruction provided comes directly from the parents. While it may not be exactly perfect instruction, or planned out like it is for teachers, the instruction given by ferociously loving parents is REAL. It is in the moment. It is purposeful to the needs of the child’s emotional development and self-confidence.

I desire my sons to become self-confident, independent, and respectful adults. I do not pretend to know what I am doing as a parent. Both my husband, Andrew and I, are just trying to do our best. What I do know, is what I have experienced as a child. Great parents who love ferociously. Andrew, too, continues to be enveloped by this type of love from his parents. We are fortunate to have both been raised in homes where we had boundaries, expectations, responsibilities, and appropriate consequences for our actions. Our parents required us to check in, request permission for activities, and take responsibility when we didn’t follow our parents’ expectations. Our home is no different.

When one or all of my sons say, “You are too strict!” or “None of my friend’s parents care where they are.” or “My friends think my parents are too old-fashioned!”, I respond with, “I will love you forever, FEROCIOUSLY.” It doesn’t discount my boys’ frustrations, but it reminds them that we will parent them as best we can.

Some might believe this to be extreme over-protectiveness (for sure in my eldest son’s mind), however, I prefer to consider it like a see-saw of independence. At birth we lift them way up high, carrying the weight and their life and future in our hands. As each child grows, we lower them a little closer to the ground, until that moment when we let them touch the earth for the first time and they push up all by themselves (maybe like when we let them ride alone somewhere on their bike, or when they get to buy their own items at the store, or when they have to ask a girl’s Dad permission to date his daughter). We continue to hold them, carefully watching how they handle the new freedoms. At times, we can control the height they go, the speed they go, and the amount of times they fly. And during the whole ride on the see-saw of independence, we watch and wait to see when they are ready to fly with control all by themselves. While it seems we let go of the see-saw once the child is an adult, the reality is, ferociously loving parents forever maintain a slight hold on the handle. Ferocious love.

Carrie Ruth  #shineon

Noodles, Laundry & Gratitude

In my previous administrator role, I would never had time to contemplate the connection between noodles, laundry and gratitude other than the simple consideration and thanks to God for convenient foods like already made ravioli and laundry machines that just need to be filled and started. Yeah, maybe thinking deeper about these items is a bit of a stretch, but my mind has been a bit lighter these days so whatever, I just go with it!

Noodles. Have you actually seen the YouTube channel, “Pasta Grannies”? This channel provides videos of pasta makers around the world. Videos provide examples of specialized homemade pasta and the makers who have mastered the art of each noodle design. This is a favorite channel of mine, again recently, as I have a deep desire to learn how to make homemade noodles.

The reason? Memories.  As a young teen, I remember learning how to make simple homemade egg noodles with my grandmother and the reminder has me yearning to learn. I can almost taste the pepper steak we ate with those noodles. Yummy! As a young mom, I recall the moments each of my sons learned to slurp up a spaghetti noodle. What a lovely, messy memory! And, most recently, I remember the third son telling me how much he loves when I make homemade chicken noodle soup because of the noodles I use. Wish they were mine! Noodles, the reminder of great people. great moments and great food!

Laundry. Honestly, I cannot remember a memory that associates with laundry. More likely, I have blocked the recall of the many, many, many loads of sorting (yeah, I don’t check pockets, much to Andrew’s dismay), washing, drying, folding and putting away that I have done in my fairly short life. What I have not blocked out is the reminder of what it should be to everyone of us. Laundry=Life (unless you choose to hang out in unwashed garb!). Yep, the logic then would be if you have more laundry in your home, you have more life.?  Well, I know this laundry subject to be overwhelming ugliness and you are already wondering when it will be over. Here is the MOST IMPORTANT THING: that laundry you hate to do, will eventually be gone. The life that we have too, will be gone. So while some (me too sometimes!) can look at the laundry with the evil eye, remember to be grateful. It means you are living!

FINALLY!!!

Gratitude. BE THANKFUL. Breathe it, share it, let it shine.

That’s it. Noodles and Laundry and Gratitude. I am so very thankful for my noodles that help me remember the people, times, and food that make the moment special. I am beyond grateful for the laundry that is non-stop at my house right now. A whirlwind of life in my world. I will try to remember to show gratitude for all of it, even when I find out a tissue was in that pocket I didn’t check!

Much love to you all!

Carrie Ruth  #shineon

PS. Here’s the Pasta Grannies YouTube link!

Pasta Grannies YouTube