half-baked! Thea’s thoughts on the half-baked world

January 3, 2010

Its a New Year

I hope that you all had a safe and great New Year’s Eve celebration. Our’s wasn’t that great. My 16 year old son wanted to stay out late with his friends to ring in the new year.  We called the police station to see if the curfew changed for the teenagers because of New Year’s Eve.  The station said an Officer would call us back.  He did and told us that the curfew didn’t change and that he has teens that he will not allow to even be on the road on this night.  He said there would be a lot of drunks and he just doesn’t trust the other drivers with his children on the road.

So, we had our son come home and tried to tell him that he couldn’t be out past 11 pm.  It started a really bad argument and that is what we were all doing as the New Year rang in!  My 18 year old daughter was crying because it might just be her last new years eve with us before starting out on her own and I felt like CRAP!  I was the first to hug and kiss her though! I tried to make some positive come out of the situation but it was hard.

Have any of you had a hard time with your teenage son? He is taller than me and it was hard to get through to him. If I tried to talk, he would stop me in mid sentence by getting louder and just not listening. I got on my facebook and put the question out and got some really good advice, like, find out the facts about what happens if your child calls the police or if you do because you are having a hard time being the one in control.  I will do an update to let you know what I have found.

Have any of you had a son or daughter that would threaten calling the police if they were getting their way?  What did you do? He has threatened to leave the house when we have told him to stay put. Do you call the police when that happens or do you just let them go?  I have so many questions and I will be the first to say that even though I offer advice on this site, I still need it myself. Ever learning, ever growing!

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December 19, 2009

Flirting with Forty

Yes, we are entering another year, 2010, and this will be the year of my big 40!

Here I am, 39 years old and I feel like I am 25! Why is that?  Our mind doesn’t seem to catch up with our body.  The other day I was looking at pictures of me holding a microphone and I saw my Mom’s hand.  I was kind of shocked. My hands didn’t look young like I am seeing in my 18 year old.

Looking back from the line of 40 that is drawn in the sand, my favorite decade has been my 30’s. My teen years I would never want to relive again! So many bad experiences. But a few good things came out of it too. I met my husband at the age of 16. I got engaged and graduated high school at the age of 17 and married at the age of 18. 19 was a rough year being married and learning how to be a, not only a wife but a Military Spouse and not relying on my relatives but my husband.

My 20’s were full of mixed emotions. I had our children at ages 21, 22, 23. At 24-27 I learned how to be a married single mom. My husband was deployed and always gone while we were in Germany. Relatives were no where around to help. I couldn’t just get in my car and drive 5 hours to see them. At 27 years old I re-dedicated my life to Christ and He blessed me with a voice to sing. 28-29 was a rough patch for me. I found out that one of my children had been molested, which devastated me! I went into depression but refused to take medicine for it. I used food as my comfort and gained a lot of weight. I was really down on myself for not being able to protect my child. Her and I went to therapy together for a year, which seemed to help. So, my 20’s were years of growing and trying to find direction after seeing how I handled the years before!

Have you been there? Wondering, as you look around the house and see little ones running everywhere, is there something more I am suppose to be doing with my life?  Not realizing that being a mother is one of the most important “jobs” anyone could ever have in life! It doesn’t pay much physically but it does fulfill mentally. The fruit of your labor will show in years to come and you will see just how important being a mother is. But it doesn’t stop when they aren’t little and depending on you anymore.  They will need you more than ever in the teen years, when you think that now is the time to get out and work because they are busy doing their own thing. Not so! It would be great to get a job during the hours they are in school but the hours after school are the most important ones! I knew this from when I was a teen and I had a working mom. So, if I got on one of my kicks to go out and find a job, I made sure it was during school hours or at home, otherwise I wouldn’t be working for very long.

Turning 30 was the hardest age for me.  I remember going to the doctor for that yearly check up and sitting there talking to the doctor. I had started to break out like never before and I was over weight. I told the doctor, “I’m depressed, I have acne, I’m over weight and I need you to check my blood for cancer and I turned 30!” I thought I was falling apart. I really was a mess. I hadn’t been in church for over 3 years at the time and it showed, to me. I mean not too long ago I had re-dedicated my life and was part of a women’s bible study and now it looked like I was falling apart!  The kids were getting older and not needing me to entertain them. So, what was I doing with my life? These were the “try everything” years. My poor husband.  He was so supportive though. I think I tried every stay-at-home job I could find. I had friends that would support me also with every new adventure. I just couldn’t find the right thing I was to do.

I worked at Red Lobster as a waitress for the first time. But the hours were not good for the family. I always wanted to try it and I am glad I did. I now know how to tip! They work really hard for below minimum wage or at least it was then. I had the chance to work for LifeWay Christian bookstore but I turned it down because I was now going to church and having to leave every quarter to sing for the Marines at Parris Island. I had my own daycare, Weeble Wobbles Daycare, in our home. I also, later, worked for the elementary school my children were attending. That was a blessing for me.  I then worked for a local bank for a year and decided to become a Realtor. I have been doing that going on 5 years now.  Singing was a big part of my 30’s. I tried hard to make it in the industry but it just wasn’t meant to be. I had so many people that stood behind me and cheered me on and it is part of my life I will always cherish. I will never have the regret either! That is important.  Don’t ever give up or not try cause otherwise you will be flirting with 40 and wondering why you didn’t try.  It’s never too late to try, even if you are past the 40 mark.

I think I might be in denial about 40 though. I just can’t believe it.  I remember when my Mom was 40. I am actually looking forward to this part of my life! This will be the times that I am going to write my book and be a published writer.  I will one day be a Grandma! I cannot wait for that! I will be able to mentor women and grow more in the Lord. I am just very excited about what the Lord has in store for me.

So, have you gone through your 40 year mark? Tell me about how it went for you and what you learned…

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December 6, 2009

Life is about Rules!

What?

I’ll say it again…life is about rules.

There are rules to a football game, rules to a job or you’ll be fired, rules in school, rules for driving.

We follow these rules because of our wants and desires.  Living Holy has rules too.  These rules aren’t to make you unhappy but to help aide you in the quest for holiness.  You have choices and are free to make them.  Standards aren’t to take freedom from you but help you live free.

For example.  I am 39 years old and I have 3 teenagers.  I see the stage they are in, each one of them, and remember that age. I remember thinking almost exactly like my oldest daughter, so when I see her going down the road I went, I want to tell you the shortcut because I know it now. That way she won’t have to take the long route.  Well, that is how it is with God’s standards.  He see’s the big picture of our life and the Word is our road map.  If we decide not to be obedient and follow the directions, then we will be on some bumpy ground.

Like my daughter hearing my advice to make life easier for her, she wants to be in control of her choices. It’s hard to give up control and stay on the right path.  This control is really a false sense.  We aren’t in control of our life, really.  We just choose which road to take when we are given a choice. In a sense we are in control of our choices.  We really aren’t free, we have just been told over and over again that we are.  I think of the movie, “He’s Just Not that into You” when at the beginning of the movie it shows that a little girl is treated really badly by a boy she was being nice to.  She runs to her mom and tells her through her tears that she is hurt. The mom then tells the little girl that the boy was mean to her because he likes her. What did that teach that little girl? That whenever a man is mean to her, that means he likes her. When we are told things we tend to believe it.  Being free without Christ is one of them.

We are all in bondage until we give our life to Christ.

Maybe we have lost faith? Faith in putting ourselves in the hands of our Creator.  If this is the case, we become our own God.  Someone that knows better. Why else wouldn’t we put our faith and trust in Christ? We think we can do better because we don’t have faith.

Forget that a certain religion has standards.  This is YOUR life! To live holy, what standards must there be to help YOU?

What is faith? Read Hebrews 11.

Something to meditate on…

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