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Friday, August 19, 2011

Stewardship

Since this is my first week of blogging, I thought I'd spend a few days introducing myself and explain why this lifestyle I've chosen is so important to me. If you want to start at the beginning, click here.

In those first few weeks after Isabella was born, I had a lot to process. I was celebrating. I was mourning. I was thinking a lot. The death of my brother made me take a hard look at everyone around me. Those I loved, those I read about in the news, those I passed in the grocery store. I realized something. We are a country of sick people. Pharmacies are booming because diseases like depression, IBS, chronic pain, diabetes, cancer and more are becoming more and more common each year. I looked at my family history with new eyes. I had to face up to the fact that I have a very strong history of mental illness in my family background. I had to realize that chronic pain is no joke, and I didn't want my daughter to struggle as I had, and especially not as my mother has.

As soon as I got the ok from my doctor, I started to run. I've run before, but this time I had to run. I was running away from sickness and towards a life of health. I got angry - at what happened to my brother, at sickness, at sadness, at weakness, and yes, even sometimes at God. Giving my family the best opportunities to be healthy went from a hobby to a big priority.

I know that sickness happens. I know that emotional disorders are real diseases that can strike anyone, no matter how healthy. Believe me, I do. However, I also know that as the keeper of my home I have the responsibility to give my family the best, and that mean not giving in to what's "normal" today. It means doing my research and making some changes. This blog is to share this journey and invite you to come along.

Living naturally is not just about my family's health, though. As I mentioned before, I believe it is our God-given responsibility to be good stewards of what we have.

Stewardship


That's an important word in our household. We've been given much, and we feel the weight of that responsibility. I want to know that I've made the most of what I have.

We want to be wise with our money. I have been surprised to find out that we have actually saved a good bit of money with most of the changes we've made. If it costs more than the mainstream alternative, I'm probably going to look for another way. I often say about cloth diapering that the environment made me think about it, but our budget made me actually do it!

We want to be wise with the earth's resources. If I can conserve resources at all, I do. That old saying "reduce, reuse, recycle" is a great mantra, if not a little overused. I know we've saved ourselves a lot of money, clutter and guilt by adopting this mindset.

Phew, all I set out to do was share a little about myself, and I ended up taking all week! Well, I'm done now, I'll move on to more exciting things come Monday. We're going to learn to make our own...well, you'll just have to come back and see!

What's one thing you do to be a good steward of what you've been given?

After a while, that word steward starts to sounds funny. Steward. steward. steward.

I'll stop now. Have a great weekend! Go do something crunchy!

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for this post, Sarah. God is using your story more than you know.

    I too am on the journey to becoming a good steward. After adding up 2 student loans, I knew something had to be done and quick. I didn't want to spent the next 10 years of my life being "a slave to my lenders." Josh and I did a Financial Peace University class (Dave Ramsey)that lasted from Dec to Feb and we now have no credit card debt, 2 paid for cars, and about 12,000 less is student loans. We are still working strong and one day (hopefully soon) we will be DEBT FREE!!!

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  2. We are Dave Ramsey fans, too, Kim! Keep working at it!

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