Archive for January, 2014
Posted by Nicole on January 10, 2014
Linking up again with Five Minute Friday at the lovely Lisa-Jo Baker‘s.
The rules: write for 5 minutes flat – no editing, no over thinking, no backtracking. Hop over to her place to find out the full scoop behind FMF, and to visit other posts that were freely written in just five minutes.
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This week’s prompt: SEE – a Five Minute Friday Post
You are not invisible.
When you clean Barbie hair out of the sink after her impromptu trip to the kitchen scissor salon.
When you search over an hour for the missing toy, place it proudly on your son’s pillow, and he barely flinches – despite throwing a full-on fit about it that morning.
When you collect all the pink cups for a special-request tea party, that your kids play for exactly 3 minutes before running to another room.
When you clear off the dining room table, again.
When, on January 10th, you remove and wrap up the Christmas ornaments by yourself.
When you are sick and make your own tea but don’t drink it because you’re needed in the living room to find that one episode of that one show that we love and can’t find, but nothing else will do.
When you clean all afternoon and it looks the same.
When the cat pukes and you Clorox the floor and no one ever knows.
You are not invisible. As long as all of us, working all day long to make the lives of our families just that little bit better, remember and SEE each other,
we are not invisible.
While I do dishes, I remember you are too.
While I clean up cat puke, I remember you are doing gross things too.
While I clean off the table AGAIN, I remember you are too.
While I search high and low for the “lucky shirt”, I remember you are too.
While I read through every episode of Jake and the Neverland Pirates so we can find the current favorite, I remember you are too.
We may each be serving different little families, but we are all serving the same big Family.
More About Family: HERE and HERE and HERE
Posted in Honest Home | Tagged: faith, family, Five Minute Friday, invisible, kids, Love | 5 Comments »
Posted by Nicole on January 10, 2014
I just discovered the blog Happy Wives Club. I love Fawn’s positivity and pride in her marriage. So, this post is part of the Happy Wives Club Blog Tour which I am delighted to be a part of along with hundreds of inspiring bloggers. To learn more and join us, CLICK HERE!
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Never be ashamed or shy about what you love.
We all know it’s cool to be cynical, to hate things, to be down on things.
We all know there are people suffering all across the world.
We all have people we care about who are struggling and longing.
And sometimes we have the things they need.
You have a husband who loves you, a lot.
You have kids who light up your life like disco balls.
You have a job that inspires you most days.
You have pretty good health.
You have Something Great.
And you’re embarrassed.
Why are we shy about the good things in life?
Maybe, it’s time we celebrate the great.
Writing this ^^^^ is just painful, honestly. Admitting you are happy is like admitting you are probably a narcissistic, selfish, ignorant child. How could you possibly be happy? And if you are happy, how dare you flaunt it?
What does a {happy} person do, because the “pursuit of happiness” is an unalienable right, but the acquisition of happiness is a punishable crime?
Listen: You may feel absurd and childlike admitting you have a great marriage, family, job, etc… SO be it. Never be ashamed of the good in your life; this does not make life better for those who are hurting. This is an insult. Appreciate what you have because, the most valuable things, you cannot give away to anyone else. They are yours. Love it all for as long as you have it. A good friend will find a way to put up with ENJOY your happiness.
As much as you wish you could help in some way, you cannot give your kids to your best friend who struggles to get pregnant. This wouldn’t fill the hole in her heart. (Even if you secretly fantasize about it – just for a day – so you can take a nap and go to the bathroom by yourself.)
As much as you wish you could help in some way, you cannot give your husband to a lonely friend. (Please don’t do that.) And, try not to talk badly about your husband to make a friend feel better, either. It’s tempting, but it hurts everyone in the long run.
As much as you wish you could help, you cannot feed or employ everyone in the world. At least not today.
It is a balancing act, for sure. We do not want to hurt people more by rubbing any happiness we’ve received in their faces. On the other hand, we do not want to ignore and bury the good in our lives. Some day it will be gone. Things will change. Do not spend the entire time you have something amazing, pretending it’s just aaiiight.
If you are lucky today. Roll with it.
Surprises and changes will come, and then it will be your turn to learn again how to let others be happy even when you can’t see the sun. The world feels pretty dark. If those who have received something great and lovely keep pretending they haven’t, how will we know the light has come? How will we keep hoping we will each have the light someday?
Everyone is pursuing happiness in some form: a partner, a job, kids, a best friend, finally a clean house, a body that works, a relationship with God that makes sense, a loving family and on and on and on — the desires and hopes and needs of the human race are immense.
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If you are in a hard time right now, I’ve been there. Promoting celebration does not mean I don’t cry hard tears for the empty, broken pieces of me – and of you. The ache in ours heart for things TO BE DIFFERENT physically hurts and each day hopes barely survive. Thank you for coming here. Feel free to yell at this post. Feel free to feel all the feelings, but please don’t give up on the light and on hope. Even the smallest bit of goodness can be celebrated.
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Some ways to Celebrate the Great:
Be Generous: sharing our food, our homes, our money, and our time with people. This should be as natural as breathing. We get and we give. We get and we give. We invite and we share. We hug and we include. Make room for friendship.
Be Sacrificial: giving more than we thought possible and finding that we still always have enough. Sacrifice is not natural. It is takes wisdom to know when sacrifice will help. Make room for justice.
Be Grateful: holding with open hands and wild wonder all that we currently have. This is where we celebrate like puppies about to go for a walk. Look at your life?! Get excited. You have good stuff. Burying the good stuff serves absolutely no one. Share everything you can. Some things you can’t share or give away, so you better just love them and be grateful. BUT Be gracious. It’s not a competition. Gloating ruins gratitude. Make room for beauty.

Original Art by the endlessly creative Libby at LibbyDoodle
(Libby celebrates the great in life – she celebrates so much that the earth can’t hold her joy. Check out her prints and original art HERE and her blog HERE)
Celebrate the great in your life! Dance with your kids holding flashlights before bed and laugh til you cry at the goodness in your life. Make out with your husband when he walks in the door. Kick butt at work and change the world. Eat a healthy meal. Go for a run and feel your strong lungs expand. Make sure as many other people as possible see generosity and sacrifice and gratitude in YOU.
Live life to the fullest reaches it can go today. This is gratitude. Do not shrink back to make room for someone else’s sorrow. Do not be so busy weeping with those who weep that you forget how good your own life is now.
We can be so wrapped up in empathy that it becomes a straightjacket. Other people’s feelings surround us completely and we no longer know how to spread back to our own shape. Like foot bindings for our minds, we are formed by their lives more than our natural growth.
“Let’s stop saying “sorry about my awesome … self, success, husband, healthy kids, good job…”
Instead, let’s say “THANK YOU. This is a good season. I’m finding ways to celebrate it all.” To use the words of my brilliant doodling, space-exploring friend Libby, “Celebrate today for its simple joys and tiny miracles.”
Never be ashamed of what you love. The more we celebrate, the more we will find to celebrate. And when you are happy and I am not, I will learn to put up with ENJOY your happiness. We will be a team. We will share the light and warmth as best we can.
We will celebrate the great!

It’s ok to be happy.
Fawn Weaver, the founder of the Happy Wives Club wrote a book about the best marriage secrets the world has to offer. They say the book is like “Eat, Pray, Love meets The 5 Love Languages.” I say the book is inspiring. You can grab a copy HERE.
Follow www.1000strands.com on Bloglovin. I actually do love Bloglovin for keeping up with the good blogs I find.
Posted in Honest Home, How Can I Help | Tagged: celebrate, happiness, Happy Wives Club, LibbyDoodle, marriage, sadness | 5 Comments »
Posted by Nicole on January 6, 2014
“What you call ‘love’ was invented by guys like me.
To sell Nylons.”
– Don Draper
I’ve been thinking about brainwashing and beauty.
I’ve realized two major things:
1. I am brainwashed in regards to how I actually look.
2. I can be free if I am willing to follow 3 simple steps and give up one major safety net.
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In the late 1950s, psychologist Robert Jay Lifton studied former prisoners of Korean War and Chinese War camps. He determined that they’d undergone a multistep process that began with attacks on the prisoner’s sense of self and ended with what appeared to be a change in beliefs. Lifton ultimately defined a set of steps involved in the brainwashing cases he studied.
We can divide this process of brainwashing into three main stages:
1. breaking down the self
2. introducing the possibility of salvation
3. rebuilding the self
Brainwashing takes place in isolation – meaning all “normal” social reference points are unavailable. Mind-clouding techniques like sleep deprivation and malnutrition were typically part of the process as well. <<<<<<< THIS is the part that blew my mind. Stay with me.
In regards to our own beauty and worth – From before we knew what was happening:
1. Our sense of self was broken down. You were told you were too skinny, too fat, too short, too tall, too dark, too pale, too ________ (fill in the blank).
Then, over time:
2. You discovered someone or something with the promise to help save you from your ugly. (Magazine articles, Pinterest boards, a manipulative friend, Marketing for skincare, etc.)
Finally:
3. You acknowledged your ugliness/faults as the bad parts of you and purchased/chased the ongoing help you need so you could be good enough and pretty enough and have people like you.
We have been brainwashed.
All of us.
And because so many of us have been brainwashed, there is no “normal” social reference point. None of us can see the truth. We are isolated as one group. We all know we are sleep deprived AND we are just cracking the surface of how malnourished we are as a country.
We are all isolated.
We are all sleep deprived.
We are all malnourished.
We are all brainwashed.
We have never been free to form our own, positive self-images without comparison – not just to a few other people in our small town (as could be manageable), but to 1,000s of people every single day who ALL look different from us and who we are taught ARE BETTER and more beautiful and desirable than us (so we better get help!).
Pause and note: This is not just a character issue where we learn not to compare ourselves to others and now walk with heads held high. This is an issue of ongoing brainwashing and psychological fog created by isolation, sleep-deprivation, and malnutrition as an excellent mind-fog base for all of the pictures and advertisements we see all day, every day. We are prisoners. We have been since we were children.
“What you call ‘love’ was invented by guys like me. To sell Nylons.”
– Don Draper
has become
What we call “beautiful and sexy” was invented by guys with cameras and money.
To sell everything.
We’ve been brainwashed into believing that anything Good and Beautiful and Positive about us… is a lie. Our worth is tied to our beauty and sexiness – take those away and we feel like the walking dead.
The message is: You are no good — you may be salvageable, but just barely.
THIS IS YOUR BRAINWASHING TALKING.
The only way we will continue to choose to remain in this machine of industry is to believe we MUST to survive. So, the brainwashing continues and we buy in out of fear and confusion.
Here’s how it goes:
First, we were broken down; by others brainwashed before us and people hoping to use us for their gain. We learn or adopt poor sleep and eating habits.
We are shown picture after picture of the people who look different than us. We are told over and over again that THEY look the right way. This is beautiful and this is obviously different from the way you look. (It doesn’t matter how you look, the brainwashing occurs the same way – you can be skinny or tall or dark-skinned or light… the messages just make sure you know you are NOT right. Piece by piece, our identity is isolated and corrupted. We are broken down into tiny parts and each part is proven to be wrong in some way or another.
Then, comes the chance to be acceptable. We are told there might be a couple parts of us that are worth “highlighting” in order to distract others from the hideous and ugly parts of us. If we “play up” some parts then they won’t notice the rest that is so so so NOT ok. “Fix what can be fixed.” In this situation, it might be your eyes, your smile, your butt. You learn that there might be elements of your body that are acceptable if you work hard enough and pay enough attention and money.
Finally, you rebuild your Self. It takes absolute constant work, according to the powers-in-charge. Constant money. Constant education. Constant attention. Moment by moment, store by store, workout by workout, by skin care review and by magazine article… for the rest of your life.
This is how you will make it acceptable for you to walk the earth.
Otherwise, you will be banished to the land of the invisible uglies. You will be an invisible ugly. People will cringe at the site of you – at worst – or ignore your existence – at best.
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This is ridiculous. This is absurd. At times we can see that, but then the triggers come and we are right back into our brainwashed “truth”. What do we do? How do we find freedom when the messages keep coming from not just advertisements themselves but our brainwashed family and friends??
The problem here is that with ALL of us brainwashed, you really WILL be cringed at or ignored by most of people if you do not devote your life to “looking your best”. Many many many movies and TV shows involve at least some kind of joke based on how “wrong” or “cringe-worthy” someone else looks. I have heard preachers make jokes at other bodies’ appearances just as often as 5th graders on the playground.
How often I have decided to put on a little makeup so people don’t have to see me “like this.” As if I cause physical pain to them with the way I look.
See, the problem is that I do.
When I don’t look great, when I have dark circles and my pants squeeze my middle, it causes you pain. You have been taught to HATE certain attributes in people. I have too.
It doesn’t have to be this way. We can choose to believe something different than a Victoria’s Secret add or google search on “beautiful people”. Those people are beautiful too, but so are you.
Here’s the rub: Our definition of beautiful is tied into not only our self-image but our image of other people as well. We have to be willing to define our own selves as beautiful while giving up all the cheap jokes about other people’s bodies too. No more easy humor at someone else’s expense.
And this is where we will lose, I fear. It’s just too insidiously fun to mock people based on the size of their thighs or their outfit at Walmart. It’s such a great way to feel better about yourself, finding something in someone else that is ugly. We are addicts to the dopamine hit. “It’s just a joke and I need a laugh.” “My life sucks and I need to find laughter somewhere, so let me make fun of that guy’s stupid face or hairy back” … “let me whisper to my friend about that girl’s cellulite showing through her stretch pants.”
But we pay for this hit of laughter with a self-loathing we cannot name or release. We pay for the bullying with a warped picture of ourselves that we will never erase.
So, we accept the brainwashing. We keep buying and perfecting and settling for only pieces of ourselves being acceptable. Then we only need to believe pieces of others are acceptable too and we can make fun of the rest. If I was to believe that I am “all beautiful” then I have to believe that others are all beautiful too.
This train of thought is sooooo dangerous and so frustrating because
People will make bad BAD wardrobe choices. People will NOT take good care of their bodies. And you WILL want to MOCK them. I cannot google People at Walmart without laughing at the absurdity of people’s choices. I cannot.

So, where is the line between the brainwashing that taught me I am wrong and need fixing AND making just really bad choices with our bodies or clothes???
I do not claim to know a black and white answer to that question. But what I am sure of is that I need to rebuild my love for myself and my love for others, no matter what they look like. Then, we can focus on the proper care and feeding of a human.
Even this beautiful person… shopping for a phone in her bathing suit.

I think it’s the only way to break my brainwashing. No more mocking others as a safety net under my own self-image tightrope walk.
I have to rebuild on the fact of HUMAN BEAUTY. Beauty that like gravity is undebatable and true for all people everywhere. If I love them, they become beautiful. It is in hatred and mocking that I find people ugly. Real love sees beauty.
I may still laugh with confusion at the choices people make. I may still wonder, WHY GOD WHY???
But I will no longer accept the story that I need to be fixed by some outside force. My beauty is undebatable – sewn into my cells when they first started multiplying. And yours is too, my friend. Yours is too. Even if you wear your bathing suit to Walmart…. I may laugh, but I will still find you beautiful.
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The three rules we can focus on in order to defend ourselves from brainwashing:
1. Come out of isolation. Find others who are free. Read God’s truth about YOU. Here and Here and Here.
2. Sleep. You are allowed to rest and be still.
3. Eat well. Pretend you are your own parent. Take good care of you. “Take Care of You.”
Posted in Beauty SOS47 | 5 Comments »
Posted by Nicole on January 3, 2014
FIGHT
There comes a moment when you realize YOU’RE the one who has been blind. You’re the one living out of old stories about how men and women should act. {OMG I’m the patriarchy.}
Women, we have sat on the sidelines and watched men fight, struggle, sweat, and bleed. We cheer. We supply water and first aid. We nurture and we caress tired backs with our soft hands.
But it’s time to get in the game ourselves. It’s time to step into the arena and fight.
We will help each other side-by-side.
I don’t know your sport or your call but I know what it looks like when we avoid the invitation to play: We offer to hold the jackets. We sit alone on the sideline and watch others try and fail and fall and laugh and get back up. We walk back home together and our pants have no grass stains.
The men and the children play and the women watch.
Not all the women do this, but I was doing this. I knew I was choosing rest over adventure. I was playing it safe. I was the safe zone for others. “Mom’s not playing! Mom’s safe!” I cherish being the safe zone, at times. I’ve loved wearing my cozy sweater and drinking coffee. But my life is floating by me. I have opted out too many times. I can feel my muscles growing weak and my desire to be saved growing strong. I don’t know about you, but I want to feel strong. I want to speak up. I want to run as fast as I can. I want to volunteer for the adventure.
Like all the best things, this epiphany started as a seed in me {here} and then with lots of fertilizing words and experiences, it has grown from a beautiful thought into a call to action.
Three parts Story Sessions, One part Lean In, Two parts Brene Brown, a good swig of Scandal, and a dash of Frozen
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Climb out of the tower yourself, grab a sword, and fight, Sister.
Find the inspiration you need and Fight, Sister. Women were not made to wrap themselves in ruffles and watch the action. Humans are made to fight. We are heroes. We are gladiators. Get in the game. Fight.
“You are imperfect, you are wired for struggle, but you are worthy of love and belonging.” ― Brené Brown
If you are a {writer {blogger {lonely {free for five minutes on Fridays… I recommend Lisa Jo Baker’s Five Minute Friday link up. It’s a really great way to meet other people online who are kind and intelligent. Come and see that we are not all snarky and mean when we type.
Posted in Honest Home, How Can I Help | Tagged: arena, Brene Brown, fight, Five Minute Friday, Lean In, play | 3 Comments »