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10 Steps For Intentional Living

November 2, 2011 in Creating Simple Living

Everyone’s intentional living is a bit different, but I wanted to compile a list of 10 steps that should carry across the board.  Even if you aren’t sure what you want your intentional life to look like you can still take these steps.

Write Out Your Priorities

What is most important to you?  God, kids, pets, car, education, retirement.  I believe God should be in there and, if you have family, it should be in there too, but beyond that it is pretty personal.  We are all wired differently to have different things that are important.  It is good to put this list (honestly) in order, then when an opportunity or change comes up you can rate it against your list.

Write Out What You Are Passionate About

To me, as an emotional woman, this is what brings me to tears.  Like the priorities, this is personal.  To me it is kids and families that struggle financially, especially in poor countries.  I think people should be able to have clean water and the chance to work to provide food for their families.  I can’t imagine the hopelessness of not being able to provide for my kids.   This is close to priorities, but not the same.  These need to be discovered so that they also can be compared against  any change or opportunity that arrises.

Get Out Of Debt

Ok, this probably should be first, but I wanted to start with something ‘funner’ than money.  Really getting out of debt is fun/freeing.  Nobody is ‘called’ to debt and nobodies dream is debt so this is a pretty good given across the board.   Debt sucks and it should be ran from.  We really like (and try to follow) Dave Ramsey’s plan/steps.  Simple… but not easy.  The idea is you have to hate debt, be scared of debt, run from debt.  It isn’t an annoyance, it steals your life and happiness… it is the enemy!

Become Your Definition Of A Minimalist In Time And Stuff

Everyone has a different idea of what is necessary material wise in their life.  Don’t worries.  This step is just making sure that you only have what you need and no extra baggage.  Think, stuff=time, stuff=maintenence, stuff=triping in the middle of the night, stuff=money, stuff=loss of space, stuff=can’t find the things you want… you get the idea.  Minimalize away any extra stuff and keep your ‘stuff life’ organized and clutter free.

Find A ‘Board Of Directors’

This I have seen in several places so it isn’t mine originally.  There is two steps in this.  First, you need to find people close to you who want you to succeed (or want to succeed with you).  These are people who will listen to your ideas and offer encouragement and ask questions to really help define what you are thinking.  They are also those who will keep you accountable.  This works in diet and exercise and will work just as good or better with intentional living.  Second, there might be people you thought would fit in the first group but don’t.  (there might even be people you are close to that you know are draining and discouraging you from looking outside your box)  These people should NOT be in your ‘Board of Directors’.   Not that you can’t still be friends with them, but what you share with them and what you talk about with them should not be your intentional living goals.  Making changes, especially ‘crazy/out of the box’ ones are hard enough without being discouraged or told it will never work.

I would love to be strong enough to do what I want and feel is right no matter what, but I am not.  I need lots of like minded, positive, encouraging people around me.  … and you probably do too :)

Fine Tune Your Resume And Keep It Current

This isn’t thought of as often, but I have come to really believe in it.  Whether you are working, love your job, don’t plan on getting a new job, etc,  it still pays to have a solid resume handy.  You never know when a time might come for a dream job (more than the dream job you might already have) or another side opportunity that you will need it for.  If all else, you will feel better knowing you are awesome and worth promoting after creating a killer resume :)   Opportunities are much easier to go for when you already have the resume to send.

Get A Passport (or equivalent if travel is not your thing)

Ok, this is kinda my thing because it is travel.  We have current passports for the whole family.  There has been options where we have tried to use them (more than just Canada) that haven’t worked out, but just having them makes it easier to go for stuff, especially last minute stuff.  If travel isn’t your dream what is?  What do you need in hand so that you could make the most of an opportunity?  Have it handy… it would be a shame to miss out on an opportinity because you weren’t ready.

Keep Learning

This is huge for intentional living.  Turn off the TV and learn something.  Take a class, read a book, sit and think… it doesn’t really matter how.  Even taking up a new hobby helps grow and expand your mind.  There is so much available right now with books, computer, cheap(er) education, that other generations wouldn’t have been able to dream of.  Still, so many people just sit with their head in the sand giving away precious time to TV or useless computer.  (my blog is very useful, lots of thinking and positive ideas so it counts as learning ;)

Keep Your Eyes And Ears Open

This goes along with the last three (resume, passports and learning).  No matter where you are or what you are doing, even if you think you are already in your ideal dream, keep your eyes and ears open.  Open for other opportunities, other challenges, new ways of thinking, new things to learn… you get the idea.  Always watch, listen and talk for growth.  Intentional living isn’t a point A to point B kind of thing.  It is continuously growing and changing as you grow and change.

Always Look For Ways To Expand This List

You got me, I only came up with 9, but 10 is such a nice number.  In all honesty, because everyone’s intentional life is a bit different it needs to be filled in and added to personally.  Take Action!  Have Fun!

Come back next Wednesday for a message from Steve Jobs ;)

Simple Tip – Thankful Thinking

October 31, 2011 in My Simple Living

I wanted to write a few posts on thinking and outlook.  I have probably touched on it before, but it is so huge.  So much of life is formed in how we choose in our head to see it. 

So minimalism or simple living is having less stuff right?  Society tries very hard to make us feel like we don’t have enough stuff and tries to makes us want to buy more and more.   This isn’t evil, it makes tones of economic sense, I just don’t want to follow it.

The way to combat the feeling of needing more and more stuff is to really focus on being thankful for what I have.   What I have is a gift.  I didn’t deserve it but I want to manage and make the most of it.

I wanted to focus a bit on what I am thankful for.  Your list is probably a bit different, but I bet we have lots of the same things.  (sorry, kinda on a list kick from last Wed still)

I am thankful for:

    1. Life, all 31 years
    2. Health, not always the best, but sure could be far worse
    3. An amazing husband who is teaching me how to love and that I am valued
    4. Energetic, healthy, and smart kids
    5. Enough money in the bank to not worry about buying groceries
    6. Almost being out of debt (we have been working hard at paying off the Prius)
    7. The ability to read and the incredible amount of books available
    8. The chance and finances to stay home with my kids and home school them
    9. Modern medicine and the preventative health information to use it as little as possible
    10. Great friends
    11. Caffeine free coffee (I can’t handle the caffeine, wigs me out, but I love the taste)
    12. Dark chocolate
    13. Olives… ok, I should probably just put great food or this list could really get long
    14. Sunny days, and hot summer days, and a south facing apartment
    15. Mostly consistent work since we became self-employed over 4 years ago
    16. A God who loves and has saved me
    17. Our minimalism journey which makes it much easier to clean, find things and/or move
    18. Awesome garage sales and Craigslist to both sell what we don’t need anymore and get things we do
    19. Blogging, the fun people I have gotten to know through it, and the challenging process of learning how to do it
    20. Sleep…. my favorite hobby
    21. Facebook and the fact that I have caught up with almost everyone I ever knew in the last few years… and the ability to take my time back and not spend near as much time on it as I have been.
    22. Brown paper packages and whiskers on kittens
    23. British Comedy
    24. Early bedtimes and quiet evenings
    25. …..my need to finish off a list with a nice round number like 25.

What does your list look like?  I dare you to make on–just making one makes the day feel better.

 

Featured Blog #2 — Married With Luggage

October 30, 2011 in Simple Living Blogs

I was so excited to find these guys and their blog

This is a pic of the couple (taken from their website with permission)

In their own words:

We are a recovering, 40-year-old, Type-A couple who learned that living large is not necessarily living well. We did all the typical things people do in their 20s and 30s: climb the corporate ladder, get married, buy a house, get divorced, climb the ladder some more, get married again, accumulate more crap, and keep repeating the process like hamsters on a wheel.

We were in love with each other but not with our lives.

After a serious wakeup call, we decided to focus on what matters and get rid of everything else.

What we kept:

  • Each other
  • A sense of adventure
  • 2 backpacks

What we trashed:

  • Everything that would not fit into our backpacks
  • Living by someone else’s rules
  • Debt and obligation

What do you get when you do the math from that equation? An open-ended trip around the world.

How cool is that!  Check out their blog and follow it with me (if you aren’t already… because they are so cool). 

They are living their dream. Your dream might not be travel, but as long as your dream includes something beyond the treadmill of the familiar and easy, these guys have hints, tips and even a BOOK to help you.   I really like these guys because my dream is travel too. 

I read their book in the past few days and really enjoyed it!  It is practical and fun.

Do you have a favorite blog or your own blog you would like to share?

Featured Blog #1-Life As Mom

October 16, 2011 in Simple Living Blogs

(my hubby took this last year, I don’t like black and white for scenery that much, but this one is cool as it leads through the picture)

Since I am a little blog I wanted to feature some of the other blogs I have found that I really like.  (these aren’t people who have asked me to feature them or paid in any way…. I am a little blog)

The first one I wanted to feature is  http://lifeasmom.com

This lady is awesome and has lots of great stuff on her blog … can’t tell it all to you.  Check it out!

 I really liked this article of hers “The Grass Is Always Greener Where you Water it”.   Two great concepts that I loved:

1.  Be content with what you’ve got. 

2.  If it isn’t as ‘green’ as you want it… maybe water it a bit where you want it to grow.  This isn’t always possible or always going to work, but it can also make a world of difference. 

“Most opportunities in life are not achievable in life without initiative”–my brilliant hubby Bryon said yesterday and I thought it fit in great.

Also ‘The Tasmanian Minimalist did an interview with me today which was super cool!  Click on the link to take a look at it.

I would love to hear of other great blogs.  Feel free to share your own if you would like too, BUT if you share your own also share your favorite that is not your own :)   With the blog give a snippet (sentence or two) of who would benefit from reading it.

Some Simple Perspective

October 12, 2011 in Simple Religion

I have been reminded from everywhere lately.  Books, worship, other blogs, friends.  What really matters?  I want to simplify my life, and I am working at it and praying for it, but I get stressed out easily.

  • Kids waking up to early and making lots of noise
  • Figuring out balanced, healthy food my kids (or hubby) will eat
  • Not starting school on time
  • Not having school planed for the day as much as I would like
  • Kids goofing off and not working on school work
  • Messy house
  • Computer not working
  • Husband getting home late
  • Kids fighting
  • Guilt over loosing my patience and frustration with not being able to ‘grow’ some

It is so easy to get wrapped up in all the stress-mess and end up hanging on the edge of a breakdown.  But, what keeps hitting me over and over the last few weeks is perspective.  What really matters.  I wanted to write out some basic life perspectives that I have been learning.

I suck, you suck, we all suck

All those kids on the playground were right.  The Bible tells us we all suck.  Romans 3:23.  We don’t even know what ‘not-sucking’ looks like or how to get there.  ……The good part for those struggling with self-esteem is that everybody sucks.  We all suck bad, but we all suck just as bad :)  

God loves us even though we suck

The craziest concept in the world.  More crazy than we can figure out.  More crazy than any fairy tale.  God wants to save us.  This will never make sense because it doesn’t fit into a human ‘world-view’ or understanding.  It is just something that we have to accept.  The reason isn’t because we ‘don’t suck that bad’ (see above).

God knows what ‘not-sucking’ looks like AND He doesn’t want us to suck

He can tell us, show us, and help us not suck.  This is exciting, because I don’t want to suck.  Romans 6:15.  The fact that I can’t change my ‘sucking’ is so freeing.  No matter how hard I try, what books I read, what self-control I can muster, what self-help theories I practice, I can’t stop.

This world sucks

Don’t let this come to you as a surprise.  This world is not fair, and has lots of bad, sucking people in it.  Gods world doesn’t suck and we will like it there (as long as we don’t want to suck… if we like sucking then we probably like our sucky world).

Our future doesn’t have to suck

Our future on this earth doesn’t have to suck.  With God’s guidance and help we can start NOT being sucking now.  God also has an awesome ‘world’ to take us too where we won’t even remember what suckiness is, only that we were saved from it, and that it…. sucks. 

This is exciting.  Basically the feeling that I can’t be a good enough parent, (or anything else in my life) is right.  That is a relieve.  The great thing is that, without doing anything to deserve it, God can and will help me.   God is all that matters and all I need to focus on.  Focused on Him the other stressors don’t make much of a difference.  Amen and Hallelujah!

 

Overlooked Perk of Homeschooling

October 7, 2011 in Simple Home School

It hit me a few days ago when I was trying to get my kids to eat broccoli and I was trying to explain to them that, when cooked right, broccoli still has just a bit of crunch…. that it isn’t supposed to smear when you try to cut it. 

Health is a big thing for me because it is very important for growing minds.  But it got me really got thinking about how much our homeschooling decision affects the kids health.  I decided to compare it to the Newstart program which I have always really respected and have also used to teach my kids health.  This is what I came up with.  Some offer only a slight difference while others offer a huge benefit.

N=Nutrition 

This, I believe is hugely different in a home school setting.  Sure there are great mothers who pack super healthy lunches and home school moms that don’t cook healthy, but for the most part kids at home are eating home cooked, fresh cooked, balanced meals.  It is just easier to do at home.  Taking a healthy lunch is hard to start with, and then there is ‘peer pressure’ or ‘lunch envy’ for the kids who get the most ‘junk’ in their lunch.  What is served at ‘hot’ school lunches can qualify for ‘warm’ (hopefully) food, but it is far from healthy, nutritious, or fresh. 

But that is just the obvious lunch problem.  There is breakfast, the most important meal of the day, that at home can be unhurried and balanced when kids are rushing out the door.  I have worked hard at cooking full breakfasts for the kids.  Sometimes it isn’t ready soon enough to get it in before our school starts at 7:15, but we can break for it at 7:45 and still have a full meal without being rushed. 

Snacks are also great.   Kids just function and think better when they aren’t hungry and we have a morning snack every day (sometimes an afternoon one, but the morning seems the most important).  For snack we usually cut up fruit or pop popcorn, but just having the kitchen close makes it easier to find something fresh and healthy.  My poor son goes through growth spurts that have him eating tones and still begging for food almost every hour.  At home there is always something on hand as well as time to stop and ‘re-fuel’.

Funny side note:  When I started homeschooling Lily at 5 I asked her what she thought of home school.  She answered “Oh mom, I love it.  At school we only got one snack (referring to pre-school) at home I get TWO snacks”  

Kids can’t think or learn hungry, or sugared up… They also can’t learn as well if they are missing vitamins or nutrients from an over processed, over stored, and over cooked diet.    This is not some great feet for a home schooling family, or that other families are mistreating their kids, it is just easier to eat nutritious at home.

E=Exercise

This probably is very different per school and per home school, but we try and make exercise really important in our day.  We have gone for a 2 mile walk, played at 2 different parks for a total of at least 3 hours, and gone swimming 3 times this week for a total of at least 4 hours.  Kids need to move.  I was super proud my kids both hiked the Grand Canyon this summer (ages 7 and 4). 

This is something families can easily still do when the kids aren’t at school, but I do believe home school makes it easier because of scheduling flexibility. 

 W=Water

This is simple, but super important.  I don’t know how the schools do it, but my kids have a cup of water at both their desks when they are working and drink regularly through the day. 

Got carried away with this post so I am breaking it into two parts.  Stay tuned for part 2 next friday! 

As I am getting ready to actually post this ‘part 1′ both kids have seemed to develop a fever…. they didn’t get the memo :)

Confessions From the Back Row

October 5, 2011 in Minimalist Parenting

That’s me.  I am the one in the back row sitting on a real chair looking at a book ….. or possibly texting at the back of story time (or any number of kids activities).  I watch the mothers sitting on the floor, bright-eyed, trying to get their kids to participate, following funny actions, and making baby talk with jealousy, guilt and amusement. 

The truth is I am just not a kid person.  I don’t like children.  If reading this makes you think of evil witches, or serial killers you obviously ARE a kid person.  Not everyone was made to be a kindergarten teacher.

I have been thinking on this for the past few days and am processing it.  A few years ago I read a statistic that 1/3 of parents wouldn’t have had their kids if they could get a do over.  I was, and still am, appalled by this.  It is sad.  I wanted kids and would still have my kids if given the choice again…. but now that I have them, I still don’t quite know what to do with them.

What I know for sure is that I want the best for them, and I want to be the best parent I can to them.  In looking at my parenting style I probably parent with a business perspective (which is my degree… so it would make sense).   I want to output the best product in the time given.  I read books on the subject, stress over processes and schedules, second guess decisions and make changes at the last-minute.   To be healthy human beings I work very hard at helping them be healthy and learn healthy habits.  I want them to contribute to society and try to teach compassion and teamwork.  I want them to learn as much as they can, learn how to teach them selves, and fall in love with a life time of learning.  I want them to be self-controlled so that they can make the best decisions and not fall for fast, cheap substitutes.   It isn’t that I want them to be good so I look good.  I feel it is my responsibility as a parent and to God to raise them as ‘right’ as I am able. 

This works great if I was going to do a math problem or program a computer.  It might even work to train a dog.  Kids are a whole other level of unexpected.  They have no manual.  I struggle because at the same ‘well of personality’ that I didn’t get my love for children or my special child-ready ’sing-song’ voice, I also somehow missed out on the patience.   …. this would make me a special ed kindergarten teacher from……

I am aware that this makes me a poor choice for staying at home and homeschooling, but I really feel that it is best for my kids to be home growing up, and now to be homeschooled also.    I feel it is best for all of us and that it offers us all a growing opportunity (though, sometimes I feel like I am breaking instead of growing)

 I believe that I am made the way I am and am given my kids for a reason.  I find and create all kinds of pressure with parenting.  I stress over what makes a good parent?

  • being a kids best friend?
  • having a kid that obeys?
  • having a kid go to Harvard (or equivalent)?
  • having a healthy kid?
  • having a socially adjusted kid?
  • having a kid that makes the football team (or goes on to play music professionally)?
  • having a kid that ‘realizes their true dream’ (whatever that might be, how can that be measured?)?
  • having a kid that Loves the Lord?
  • other

The problem with the ‘business parenting model’ is that it is very unattached.  I have always struggled with attachment.  Sure, I love my kids, but I wish I really felt connected to them.  I am scared that if I can’t connect with them as kids, then the teenage years will be impossible. 

I have never been good with connecting.  I don’t think many people are.  Something to do with society and past hurts makes it easier.  My wonderful husband has taught me how to connect in our marriage.  We love spending time together and would rather be with each other than pretty much anything.  I want the same thing with my kids now as well as after they grow up.  I want our family to be tight and experience joy and loss as a unit.   This is my ideal, but, I haven’t figured it out yet. 

So, there is my confession.  I am not a great parent, but I don’t think a love for children has to be a prerequisite.  Don’t look down on me because I hate sitting on hard floors or doing silly actions, I am trying my best just like you are.  Sometimes I wish I was as good as you interacting with my kids…. and sometimes I vow never to look that ridiculous. 

This is a blog on simplicity, and it is my goal in life… but if you have read a few of my posts you know that I am far from figuring the concept out.  With parenting also, I want to take the stress out and just enjoy it.  But it isn’t like making a cake… if it falls or burns I can just start again, parenting is serious business.  

Re-reading this post I think it sounds like a downer.  I don’t mean it like that.  I had a bad day last week with parenting and it was really stressing me out, but for the most part we really do have fun together learning.  There is just those moments that smack me behind the head and leave me frantically searching for a book with answers… and there isn’t one :)

Stress Free Money at $40,000 and below

September 28, 2011 in Creating Simple Living

 

I found an article this morning about how a family of 4 was living on $40,000.  It was titled ’The Secret to Living Well on $40,000′.  Now I think this family is great and financially smart, but how can living on $40,000 be a secret?  This is above the poverty and welfare lines and includes tons of families in our country.  Shhhhh…. people all over the place are surviving on $40,000 a year.  

The key to simple, stress free money is that money coming in is greater than money going out.  That is it.  No matter what someone makes it is this where the peace/stress line is.   It is something that can be in balance even under $40,000 a year.  (gasp)

No matter what the ads say, your friends do, or TV portrays the median income in 2010 in the USA was $50,046 (and dropping) source.   That means that half of the families make and live on $50,000 or less.   In the midwest it is lower. In Nebraska where I live the median income is $47,357 source.   This means a large percent are living on $40,000 or less. 

Living on less money than comes in is key to living a simple, money-stress-free life.  It is huge in my life, and it is huge in most people’s lives (unless you are part of a very small amount of people who make so much you can’t spend fast enough…). 

I wanted to write-up the numbers of what our family does.  We are working on budgeting and cutting our bills back even more since we decided to simplify because we want to save up as money for the things we want as possible. (and we are trying to pay of the Prius)

Our family budget is about $2200 per month.  We don’t always balance but we have come out ok on the average on months when we aren’t traveling.   This is spendable income of  $26,400 per year (after taxes, contributions, savings).  This is how it breaks down:

Rent- $800

Food-$350

Car Gas-$175

Utilities -$75

Entertainment – $50

Misc (cloths, house stuff, etc) – $200

Savings pool for insurance (health and car), car expenses, school costs, medical costs – $550

Our phone and internet is paid out of our businesses. 

Since we are self-employed we don’t know what we will make from one month to the next so the less we have to make the less work stress we have.  We also choose to spend as little as possible for the ’everydays’ so we can take longer vacations and having more money in savings.  It is probably possible to live on even less and still provide food and shelter for a family of 4. 

What I want to get across is, for the most part in this country, people have way more financial freedom than they often embrace.  Most of our money is spent for wants and not for needs.  It is a choice. 

It is perfectly fine to spend money on whatever you want.  I am not saying that spending money on wants is wrong.  I just get frustrated by people’s excuses and pity party based on money.  If more money is going out than coming in and it is creating stress, fix it.  If you want money for something specific and don’t have it, fix it.  If it costs too much to live in a specific area, city or state… move.    Get to the place where it isn’t a fight to finish the month in the black and life gets better. 

Money is a tool, not a barrier.  Simple, intentional, and even possibly minimalistic living really helps prioritize and make sure money is not a secret and not a stressor.   It is true in this society that there is always a push to spend more and the myth that families can have it all is everywhere.  These things do make it feel like living on $40,000 or less is hard. 

Another great recourse is Dave Ramsey’s program and teaching.  He is super motivating and entertaining and has practical, usable advice.

The Bad Side of Bulk

September 21, 2011 in Minimalist Tips

This is a crazy post for me to write.  A year ago, this post would have sounded very different so, I guess, this area really shows how my thinking has changed.  I have learned that simple living and simple homemaking often doesn’t including buying in bulk.

I used to love bulk.  I have never been a hoarder of stuff after I have used it (like kids cloths or craft projects) but I was a big hoarder on bulk items.  Before we moved to our apartment this spring I had our house packed with all kinds of things I found in bulk or on sale.  We had a year or more supply of stuff from toiletries, to food, to kids cloths (these purchased several years in advance at garage sales).  My thriftiness had me buying everything in advance when I could find it.  I always shopped through all the clearance sections and found great deals. 

While downsizing this spring I ran into the problem of trying to figure out what to do with our years supply of so many things.  I found myself selling lots of never touched toiletries and boxes of laundry soap, and donating lots of cloths that they kids wouldn’t have grown into for years.  Even now, lots of stuff that we have in our apartment now is left over bulk that I kept that we will hopefully use up in the next year.   

What I am coming to realize is that bulk really isn’t cheaper for two main reasons:

First, I am not sure I will really need it.  Often I have ended up with more cloths purchased ahead of time than my kids even need for a size and season.  I have gotten lots of shampoo that I then decide I don’t like as well as I thought I did.  We get sick of a food and there is still lots left in the cupboard. 

Second, I am paying for temperature controlled storage for my bulk.  It might be cheaper to buy TP for a year at a time on sale, but then I need to have a house big enough to have a place to store it.  Most of my basement and bathroom cupboards were full of different bulk products.   Now I don’t have the space to keep all these products, but I am also paying much less living expenses and utilities.  Having a chest freezer was nice in the house and it was always full, but I am not sure that it saved what we paid for in electricity to run it.  Honestly, the stuff purchased in bulk was cheaper, but was it really cheap enough to make up for the costs.     

Beyond these there is the hassle of having to sort through stuff and keep it organized. 

Probably most people aren’t near as crazy as me.   My excuse was that hoarding for the future was much smarter than hoarding other useless items.  It has just been a revelation, or a change in the way I am thinking, to realize that this really wasn’t saving me money and that living simply, buying only a few things in bulk or ahead is really, surprisingly cheaper…. and way easier.

If we need to have it all, than couponing or shopping all over town might make it cheaper… but maybe we don’t need it all.

Less hassle, more time.  Less stuff, more money.   Simple life, more freedom.

Making a Big Difference…. Simply.

September 20, 2011 in Simple Compassion

Welcome to my simple living blog!  Thanks for reading.  Take a look around and feel free to comment or e-mail me. 

I want to share a simple way that my family has been involved in making a powerful difference.  For the last 3ish years we have sponserd 2 children through World Vision.

First off I have a huge burden for those in 3rd world countries.  There are evils and poverty in our country, but here there are programs everywhere for food and medical.  Clean water and education are amazingly easy to come by no matter who you are or where you are.  In other countries it isn’t this way.   Lack of clean water, food and basic medical attention kill millions of people.  The education that could help pull them out of the cycle is often something they can’t get, don’t have time to get, or are too weak to get.  We did nothing to deserve where we were born and they did nothing to deserve where they were born.  In the world, we are all family and we should do all we can to help each other. 

What is neat about world vision is the connection.  We picked 2 children, matching ages and genders with our own as close as we could and have been able to write back and forth and learn about how they are benefiting from our support.  We know that these children will grow up to get the education that can give lasting help to their community. 

Let me introduce you to our kids:

Juster(below)-Juster is a 7-year-old girl in Malawi.  She seems shy, but likes to draw us pictures and is doing well in school.  Her aunt writes us letters because she isn’t old enough to write yet.  As she does more school I am looking forward to seeing letters from her.  Last Christmas we sent extra money and she was able to get several things including a metal storage container to keep the bugs from destroying her blankets, cloths and a goat.  We send $35 for Juster every month and a world vision worker checks on her everyday because she is high risk.  She is a Hope Child.

Phochland(seen at the top of the post)-Phochland is a little 4-year-old boy with lots of older siblings living in northeast India.  Still to old to do school or write he has done a few simple drawings or colorings for us and we send him lots of stickers.  He loves playing ball and is very healthy.  Last Christmas, with some extra money we sent, world vision purchased a bike for his dad.  We send $30 a month for Phochland and the world vision worker checks on him every week. 

Sponsor a Child

These are my additional kids.  It has been a great experience for our whole family.  Lily and Ian both write letters and pick out stickers and treats to send.  We would love to visit them someday. 

In this world we can’t fix all the problems, and it seems overwhelming when we hear all the terrible struggles people face.  I love that I can do something for someone.  These kids, their families and their communities benefit from a small amount that is automatically withdrawn out of my account each month. 

Will you help too?  Will you find a kid to help?  It is super easy, pick and kid and set up automatic withdrawal and they take it from there.  If you have time, when you remember, you can send a note, but your money is working even when you don’t think about it.

My reason for writing this article is two-fold.   First, I think all kids deserve a chance no matter where they are born, and I believe World Vision does a great job of offering sustainable help to communities.

Second, if I can convince 5 of you to sign up by the end of Sep to sponsor a child I get entered in a drawing for a trip to Peru.  So, if you sign up, send me an e-mail with your name and your sponsored childs ID number :)  I would also love to hear how it is going as you sponsor your child. 

This is such a great opportunity.  As much as I would love to fly over to some of these countries and try to help, I can’t figure out a good way now.  What my small contribution does every month provides the practical, educated, lasting help that I can’t physically give.  It is a blessing to be involved, simple to , and a bargain! 

Will you sponsor?  Sponsor Now!