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Womanly Wednesday: Life’s Roller Coasters

July 20, 2016 By Lauren

Welcome to this week’s Womanly Wednesday! In this series, different women share their struggles, bravely opening up about their stories so that other people would be inspired and encouraged.  Make sure to check out the Womanly Wednesday archives to read other posts from this series! 

Faith in God is a lot like a roller coaster. You are along for the ride, which includes climbing, dips, speed, and frequent loops. You buckle in, trusting that God is in control and capable to handle all the dips and loops that life has to offer. One of the most challenging aspects in my faith has been releasing my control and trusting God. However, 5 years ago, God decided to humble me and teach me about absolute trust and faith.

On January 6, 2011, my husband and I were expecting our second child. We received a call that, unfortunately, too many women have had to receive. Our second born had a condition which had caused his brain to not form properly. The prognosis was grim, he would die within my womb, or live shortly after birth. Beyond being devastated, I had no control, and that was more than I could handle.

Shai with Mom and Dad

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Filed Under: Womanly Wednesday

Five on Friday: Our California Trip

July 15, 2016 By Lauren

Last week we had our first travel adventure with the baby nugget – a one week adventure to California to visit where I grew up.  Today’s post is dedicated to some pictures and stories from that trip…I’ll share more details about some other life and summer updates next week!

1) Traveling With A Baby

Before we left, I shared that I was pretty nervous to fly with Caleb for the first time.  He doesn’t sleep well when we’re out and about anymore and he also tends to get a little flustered/distracted and not want to nurse in public.  Well, he did both of those things on our first fight and we still survived! On our way there, he wouldn’t fall asleep in the stroller or carrier and only slept for about 25 minutes on the plane for the entire 6 hours it took us to get from our house in KC to my parents house in Cali.  He also refused to nurse, instead drinking an entire chilled bottle (even though he hasn’t successfully bottles in almost six weeks). All of that said, he didn’t fuss and cry on the plane, so we were happy!

Caleb on Plane

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Filed Under: Life

Womanly Wednesday: Depression, Medication, And Trust

July 13, 2016 By Lauren

Welcome to this week’s Womanly Wednesday! In this series, different women share their struggles, bravely opening up about their stories so that other people would be inspired and encouraged.  Make sure to check out the Womanly Wednesday archives to read other posts from this series! 

Growing up, I don’t think I knew I was depressed even though all of the signs were there. In middle school, I begged my mom to let me stay home even though I loved school and learning. I would come home, go to my room, and just cry. I remember always feeling alone and sad, but I never wanted to talk to anyone about it because they would ask why, and I wouldn’t have an answer. In my mind, I had no reason to feel the way I did. On the rare occasion when I did talk about it, I usually got one of two answers: 1) Happiness is a choice, or 2) It will pass. And so I took the “fake it ‘til you make it” route. I didn’t know I would be faking happy for the next decade and a half.

Womanly Wednesday Depression, Medication, and Trust Ashley

College was more of the same. I buried myself in my schoolwork, and although I was busy to the point of exhaustion, at least I wasn’t feeling like ending it all. But some months, my depression was constant. I would go to bed sobbing and wake up to find that sleep no longer cleared my mind. During the months when the clouds had lifted, I thought that maybe this was finally the end, and that maybe I really was okay. It always came back.

Since high school, I wrestled with God over my depression. I wondered why He allowed me to be depressed. I remember begging God to help me, and I remember feeling disappointed and angry when nothing changed. I looked up every verse in the Bible that talked about depression, trying to hold on to anything I could find that would justify the way I felt. I settled on thinking that my depression was a trial and God was testing me like He tested Job.

After college, I stayed busy. I moved up to Northern Virginia, participated in a church fellowship program, moved to Arlington, held two different jobs, got married, moved two more times, started graduate school, and bought a house. I was mostly unaware that I kept myself busy, but I began to notice that if I was alone for too long, I would end up curled up in a ball crying on the couch. Grad school—with all of it’s challenges, excitement, and pure brutality—is a lot of alone time, and depression became a louder part of my mental life. I was still holding out hope that if I was disciplined enough in my Bible study, prayer, and Church, that God would one day take my depression away. But my spiritual life turned into a to-do list, and I realized that the more I checked off the boxes, the more frustrated I became that my depression wasn’t getting better. I truly felt stuck and more depressed than ever. I stopped going to God with my depression because I was too tired and too angry.  

Womanly Wednesday Depression, Medication, and Trust Graduation

Up until this point, I believed using medication for depression was a cop out. To me, taking anti-depressants meant that you were either too lazy to put in the work to figure out what’s really going on or you were side-stepping God. If God had a purpose for my depression, then taking medication would nullify that purpose. It was cheating. In Christian terms, I was trying to fix my depression on my own. If I could just hold on a little longer, go to the right counselor, or become a more mature Christian (check off those boxes!), then one day all of my sadness would disappear. And on top of all of this, I had a family history of depression, so this struggle all seemed very normal to me. None of my family members took medication, so I didn’t see it as a real option.

Through our church, I met a friend who was super honest with me about her depression right from the beginning. She took anti-depressants and talked openly with me about the struggles of depression and medication. I had never known a Christian to be so open about mental health. I realized that the primary reason I refused to take medication was pride. I wanted to fix my mind all by myself. After a lot of deliberating, I decided to see the school psychiatrist and hear what he had to say. I filled a prescription for Wellbutrin and went home with no intention of taking it.

But what if God was asking me to put down my pride and trust that he has put these people and this option in my path because he knows the hard choice for me is to humbly rely on something other than myself to help? Let me be clear: anti-depressants aren’t “the answer,” nor do I want to tell anyone what they should or should not do about their psychological well-being. But what I realized about my Christian community was that no one was saying it was okay. Instead, I heard that depression and anxiety had more to do with your relationship with God than with the reality of being human. No one was saying it was okay to treat depression as you would treat high blood pressure or physical pain. Depression seemed to be only situational and environmental. I spent the past fourteen years of my life thinking that my depression couldn’t be biological.

Womanly Wednesday Depression, Medication, and Trust Hiking

This is all hard to talk about because there are a few things that contradict what I am saying. First, I believe that psychological differences aren’t always in need of fixing. Of course I don’t want to be sad or anxious, but to expect to be always chipper and relaxed is absurd. Second, I have a family history of depression, and no one else takes medication, so why should I? Third, I do believe God can alleviate my depression and anxiety.

For me, being on anti-depressants isn’t a cop out, and it doesn’t mean I’m weak. It means God has led me to the conclusion that relying on Him means relying on modern medicine. Anti-depressants provide me with the mental space to pursue God more fully because I’m not only praying about how He can help me be less sad. It’s an exercise in letting go of the idea that I can fix it all by myself.

Womanly Wednesday Depression, Medication, and Trust

For the Christian community, I wish we would talk about mental health more openly. Everyone’s story is different, and there’s no one solution to depression. I am still very much in the middle of this journey into understanding what it means to trust God with my mental health and letting go of this idea that I need to do this without help. My depression is a part of me that God made. It’s a hard part and of course I wish it wasn’t there. But through all of this, I realized that sometimes God gives us answers that we aren’t expecting—answers that force us to put down our “I can do it myself” attitude and just trust Him.

Ashley is a writer, teacher, library-lover, and wife of a medical student. She just finished her Masters in English at Virginia Tech and is now pursuing her Masters in Creative Writing at Hollins University. She loves to read and write about disability advocacy, race relations, mental health, and comics. She also likes to make art out of everything. You can follow her on instagram and facebook.

Filed Under: Womanly Wednesday

Five on Friday: Summer Trips And House Changes

July 1, 2016 By Lauren

Happy Friday, y’all! We had another fun week of house projects and time with family and couldn’t be loving summer any more.  The only bummer? Our neighbors think it’s great to start setting off fireworks from 7 -10 PM every night for about 10 days leading up to the 4th of July and 2-3 days after.  It is HORRIBLE for our dog and I’m a little nervous it will wake up Caleb when they get even louder this weekend! I hate to be a mean old lady about it, but seriously people! Calm the heck down with the fireworks! Don’t you know some of us have scaredy-cat pets and sleeping babies?

Anyway, angry rant over…here are a few updates from our week!

1) Emptying Our Living Room

Now that we’ve lived in our house almost a year and a half, we have such a better idea of both the decorating styles we like and the way that we actually use the spaces in our home.  For the last few months I’ve been looking at the bookshelves I styled for our living room in the very beginning and itching to change them to better match our style now.  On a whim this week, we decided to just go for it and make a change! We took everything off the shelves and piled it on our dining room table. Jordan’s going to put some trim and molding on the shelves to look like built-ins and then I’ll work on styling them in a cleaner, more simple way.  I am so excited to get started on this project and make our living room a cozier, cleaner space!

Living Room Before

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Filed Under: Life

Womanly Wednesday: Questioning Faith And Conquering Cancer

June 29, 2016 By Lauren

Welcome to this week’s Womanly Wednesday! In this series, different women share their struggles, bravely opening up about their stories so that other people would be inspired and encouraged.  Make sure to check out the Womanly Wednesday archives to read other posts from this series! 

Cancer is one of those things you don’t think much about until it shows up in your own life. At least that’s what happened to me. I knew people—friends, family members, coworkers—who had cancer, and my heart went out to them. But I never fully considered the emotion and struggle that dreaded word brings until I heard it from the lips of my own doctor. That was in 2010, and my life has never been the same.

When a 6-inch tumor was removed from my thigh in the summer of 2010, I thought I had beat cancer. I was thankful to resume life and put the whole ordeal behind me.

And I did…for three years.

IMG_4034

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Filed Under: Womanly Wednesday

Caleb’s Four Month Update

June 28, 2016 By Lauren

Yesterday marked four months since Caleb made us parents and these four months have been such a joy! He seems so much more like a little person than a newborn these days and I couldn’t be more grateful for all the time we’re getting to spend with him since Jordan’s home for summer break.  I love writing these updates because they give me time to reflect on all the way little man has changed over the last month and I know I’ll cherish reading them down the road!

The Numbers

I haven’t had him officially weighed in a while, so I don’t have an actual update on this, but can I just say he seems HUGE to us? Every time I pick him up I swear he gets a little bit chunkier.  His arms and cheeks continue to fill out and I love when I get to see his sweet, soft little belly!  We have started switching him to 3-6 months clothes, even though he still wears some 0-3 stuff.  I remember thinking those clothes looked so big and it’s crazy that they are what fits him now!

Caleb's 4 Month Update Sticker

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Filed Under: Life, Motherhood

Five on Friday: Rock Star Husbands And Grandma Visits

June 24, 2016 By Lauren

Happy Friday, y’all! With Jordan being away for a few days (see below), it was a weird week for us but I’m still loving summertime with my sweet family!

1) My Rock Star Hubby

After training hard for the last several months, Jordan headed to Minnesota with a close friend and training partner to run a marathon.  They had both done everything they could to be prepared and were hoping to run the race sub 2:50 (that’s about 6.5 minute miles, people – INSANE).  They signed up for this race in Minnesota with the hopes the weather would be a little cooler, but it was a randomly warm day and was already 75 degrees with lots of humidity by the time the race started.  As my hubby said, that’s great weather for a picnic but NOT for a marathon.  There were tons of runners in the medical tents as the race progressed and the overall average finish time for the race this year was over 30 minutes slower than the last few years.  The heat was intense! Luckily my guy is a rock star and still managed to run a 2:53, beating his old P.R. of 2:55 and continuing his journey towards running the Boston Marathon in 2017! I am so impressed by not only how fast Jordan runs, but also how consistently he trains.  This guy’s the best, y’all.

Jordan Race

Jordan didn’t take any pictures at this race so this picture from a 10K he won earlier this year will have to do!

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Filed Under: Life

Seven Things I Wish I’d Known About The Newborn Stage

June 21, 2016 By Lauren

As a first time mom, everything is new to me.  Sure, I’ve held a few babies in my day and even worked in the infant room of a daycare for a summer, but I still have a heck of a lot to figure out when it comes to caring for a baby nugget 24/7.  I learned SO much in those first few months about everything from newborn sleep patterns, breastfeeding, and so much more.  Some it might be specific just to our little guy, but if I could go back and tell myself a few important lessons on Day One, these are the things I’d want myself to know.

7 Things I wish I'd Known About The Newborn Stage - Great tips for new moms!

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Filed Under: Motherhood

Five on Friday: Baby Milestones And Ikea Fails

June 17, 2016 By Lauren

Summer is in full swing and we’ve loved getting to be home with our baby nugget.  Here are a few updates, photos, and silly stories from our last two weeks!

1) Slow Summer Days

With Jordan home for the summer, we’re doing a whole lot of nothing these days.  Jordan has cross-country practice in the mornings, then once he gets home we spend our days going on walks, playing with Caleb, watching TV shows (we’re currently rewatching the Office and loving it), and running random errands.  I do love these slow days but I still wrestle with the feeling that we should be doing more (like I shared about in this post about how I’m fighting the pressure to be productive).  I’m trying to be content and remember that I’ll long for these slow days when we have a crazy toddler or multiple kiddos! So for now, if you need us, there’s about a 95% chance we will be at home in the AC snuggling our sweet boy and laughing at silly TV shows.

image1 (7)

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Filed Under: Life

Womanly Wednesday: How OCD Impacts A Relationship With God

June 15, 2016 By Lauren

Welcome to this week’s Womanly Wednesday! In this series, different women share their struggles, bravely opening up about their stories so that other people would be inspired and encouraged.  Make sure to check out the Womanly Wednesday archives to read other posts from this series! 

“After uttering the same sentence of my prayer for the fourth time, I finally feel like I said it right. Now God knows I’m sincere, because I phrased the sentence correctly and didn’t doubt this time.
Now on to Bible reading… 10 minutes later, I’m still on the same paragraph, because I’m worried that the passage has a deeper truth that I’m missing. Or that it is, in fact, a direct answer to what I was praying about the night before- except, it wouldn’t matter if I was reading Matthew or Leviticus. I would still find a way to make it about that subject. Because it has to be. Whatever I’m reading has to be a direct answer to my prayers and questions, and I just have to ‘decode the message.'”

How OCD Impacts A Relationship With God 1

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Filed Under: Womanly Wednesday

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