Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Wrapped in Words: Writing as a Gift

I’ve always appreciated the beauty of a perfectly wrapped gift. Growing up, Christmas morning was always exciting, not only because I knew Santa had left me gifts, but because of the care he had taken in wrapping them. I was shocked to learn that, for many of my friends, their gifts were unwrapped — simply placed beneath the tree, without thought or attention. But for me, the wrapping, the hiddenness, the quiet anticipation was all part of the gift itself.

Like a beautifully wrapped gift, this is the way I envision every post I write. The meaning is folded carefully, tucked into layers that ask the reader to linger, to notice, to unfold slowly. Each phrase, each turn of sentence, is an invitation to discover the subtlety beneath the surface. The delight comes not from being handed everything at once, but from the quiet reveal — the treasure that is held just long enough to be savored.

This is why I don’t care about SEO. Keywords, algorithms, optimized headlines — they are like gifts placed beneath the tree without care: no wrapping, no pause, no anticipation. They may bring numbers, but they cannot teach the heart to slow down, to notice, to savor.

Like unwrapping a gift on Christmas morning, the gift of this space is the slow discovery — in the quiet attention we give to words, to moments, to the hidden beauty that asks to be noticed. Here, meaning is not rushed or delivered at once; it arrives gently, lingering in the heart, leaving a sense of quiet delight long after the page is closed.

If you are here, reading these words, that tells me something: you notice. You linger. You understand that beauty, like contentment, cannot be rushed. You are someone special.

So, thank you for being here — for slowing down, for noticing, for taking the time to seek and value writing that reflects thoughtful care, for wanting more than catchy phrases or bullet-pointed lists, for lingering with words that invite reflection and presence. Your attention turns this space into a shared gift, one that is richer because you are part of it.

Monday, March 2, 2026

A Holy Reordering: Recovering Peace Room by Room
– The Hidden Foundation of the Homemaker’s Heart


Before a single surface is touched, we enter the first room. It is unseen, it has no square footage, yet everything in the house flows from it.

“Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.”

— Psalm 51:10

David did not begin with external reform. He began with inner renewal.

As homemakers, especially those seeking a faith-filled home, we are often overstimulated, overextended, and quietly anxious. We manage schedules, meals, conversations, digital input, expectations — both spoken and unspoken. And without realizing it, we carry that internal noise into the rooms we inhabit.

A hurried heart produces a hurried home.
A resentful spirit creates tension in the smallest exchanges.
An anxious mind makes even orderly spaces feel unsettled.

We cannot scrub our way into peace. We must receive it — and then steward it.

“Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.”

— Proverbs 4:23

Everything flows from it.

The tone of your voice in the morning.
The way you respond to interruption.
The patience you extend at the end of a long day.

The home is an overflow. A peaceful home is the outward reflection of spiritual renewal.

This is why Lent invites examination. Not condemnation — examination. A gentle asking:

Where has clutter gathered quietly in me?
What emotional residue have I not addressed?
Where am I striving instead of abiding?

The 17th-century bishop Francis de Sales counseled:

“Have patience with all things, but first of all with yourself.”

A holy reordering begins with that patience.

❊ Today’s Lenten Home Reset Practice

Choose one small area — a drawer, a corner, a basket — and tend to it slowly. As you do, pray Psalm 51:10 softly. Let the physical act mirror the spiritual invitation.

Not frantic purging.
Not performative productivity.
Just alignment.

You might whisper:

“As this space is cleared, clear what does not belong in me.”

Because the goal is not an immaculate house. It is a settled spirit. When the heart is steadied, even modest spaces feel like refuge. When the inner room is tended, the outer rooms begin to follow naturally — not from pressure, but from peace.

So before the day gathers speed, begin here.

Stand quietly in that unseen room.
Let the Spirit name what has been crowding your interior space.
Receive mercy where you expected pressure.

This is the real beginning.

Not a reset that lasts a weekend.
Not a burst of motivation.
But a reorientation.

If the heart is tended, the home will follow.

Join me next Monday as we continue our Lenten homemaking series and turn our attention to The Kitchen — the place of nourishment, conversation, and daily offering. Together, we will explore how Christian homemaking rhythms in this space shape not only our meals, but our hearts, and how ordinary tasks can become acts of faith-filled home stewardship.

Until then, begin with one quiet act of order. Clear it slowly. Pray honestly. Guard your heart.

This is where we begin.

Room by room.

Heart first.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Ordinary Days of Small Things Spring Day Keeper
Revised and Updated!

Many years ago, I began creating seasonal planners as a way to be more intentional about making lasting memories with my family. Over time, these planners evolved into what I now call Day Keepers. Each Day Keeper follows the natural rhythm of the four seasons — beginning in Spring with (March, April, May) continuing through Summer (June, July, August), Autumn (September, October, November), and Winter (December, January, February).

Rather than following the calendar year, I chose to begin each Day Keeper in the Spring, a season of fresh starts, new beginnings, and the planting of seeds — both literal and metaphorical. The year then flows naturally through each season, ending in Winter — a time for rest, reflection, and restorative peace. This cycle mirrors the rhythm of life itself, giving space for growth, change, and renewal.

Over time, I began offering the Day Keepers here on my blog, and they quickly became a popular resource for those looking to live more intentionally and savor life’s everyday moments. It has been a few years since I last shared them, but this year felt right to give them a fresh update and bring them back for you.

I have always made these planners available free of charge, and I will continue to do so this year. However, as much of the content is now being reframed and expanded for my upcoming book, What We Keep: Making Time For What Truly Matters, this will be the last year the Day Keepers are available free of charge. In the future, they will likely be offered as a companion piece to the book. So for now, this is your last opportunity to download them without cost.

If you’ve been longing for a way to live more intentionally, make lasting memories, and follow the natural rhythm of the seasons, I invite you to download your Day Keeper today and begin your year with intention.

Download the The Spring Day Keeper Here

Download the Spring Quarter 2026 Calendars Here

Download the Spring Phenology Wheels Here

Print one phenology wheel for each month and record daily moon phase, weather, sunrise and sunset, high and low temperature, sketch flora and fauna and anything native to your location. The possibilities are endless!

May this planner guide you in noticing what matters, celebrating the small moments, and carrying intention into every day of your year.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Lent For Homemakers: Week Two - Santifiying The Ordinary


There is a quiet, often overlooked rhythm in the spaces we inhabit. The stove hums, dishes clink, and the laundry waits patiently in its corner. Yet in these ordinary, repetitive movements, God whispers. The challenge—and the invitation—is to see the sacred in the mundane, to offer our small tasks as prayer.

This coming week, we'll step into Week Two of Lent For Homemakers, Sanctifying the Ordinary, leaning into the truth Teresa of Avila spoke so simply: “God walks among the pots and pans.” Here, the ordinary becomes holy; each chore transforms into an act of devotion

 Sunday — Lighting the Second Candle
Scripture: Colossians 3:23 — “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”
Quote: “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”
Homemaking Act: Prepare a simple Sunday breakfast with intention. Notice each movement: the crack of an egg, the swirl of milk in a bowl.
Intentional Encounter: Pause before eating. Dedicate the meal to God, allowing gratitude to settle into your chest.
Journal Prompt: Which ordinary task today can I offer as worship?

 Monday — Chores as Prayer
Scripture: 1 Corinthians 10:31 — “Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”
Homemaking Act: Wash dishes slowly. Each plate, each glass, an offering. Let the rhythm of your hands become a rhythm of prayer.
Intentional Encounter: Listen. Hear the subtle sounds of your home—the drip of water, the soft scrape of a sponge. Awareness itself is an act of devotion.
Journal Prompt: How can I make my chores a conscious act of devotion today?

 Tuesday — Serving Others at Home
Scripture: Matthew 25:40 — “Truly I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.”
Homemaking Act: Set the table with care, mindful of each person who will use it.
Intentional Encounter: As you place utensils and plates, silently pray for each individual. See Christ in the ones you serve.
Journal Prompt: Where is Christ present in the people I serve at home today?

 Wednesday — Folding with Intention
Scripture: Psalm 90:17 — “Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us.”
Homemaking Act: Fold towels or linens slowly and neatly, offering each fold to God.
Intentional Encounter: Sit for a moment with the folded linens. Reflect on how small, often unnoticed acts can create beauty in the everyday.
Journal Prompt: What small, often unnoticed acts can glorify God in my day?

 Thursday — Faithful in the Little Things
Scripture: Luke 16:10 — “Whoever is faithful in little is faithful also in much.”
Homemaking Act: Water and tend your indoor plants or garden. Notice how each leaf unfurls, how life quietly responds to attention.
Intentional Encounter: Watch closely. God’s creativity shows itself in tiny growth, reminding you that faithfulness is measured in small, consistent acts.
Journal Prompt: In what small ways can I be faithful today?

 Friday — Seeing Truth and Beauty
Scripture: Philippians 4:8 — “Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just…think about these things.”
Homemaking Act: Clean a frequently used surface while praying silently for peace in your home.
Intentional Encounter: Mid-cleaning, pause. Notice the simple, overlooked beauty surrounding you—a ray of sunlight, the curve of a chair, the quiet of an evening.
Journal Prompt: What small beauty or truth did I notice today that I might otherwise overlook?

 Saturday — Preparing Thoughtfully
Scripture: Ecclesiastes 9:10 — “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might.”
Homemaking Act: Prepare clothing or items for the week ahead, laying them out with care.
Intentional Encounter: Take five minutes to breathe deeply, acknowledging God’s presence in preparation.
Journal Prompt: How does preparing thoughtfully for tomorrow become a spiritual practice today?

 Living the Ordinary as Worship
This week, allow yourself to step fully into the sacred rhythm of your home. Each dish washed, each bed made, each plant tended, becomes a whispered prayer. The ordinary is not mundane; it is a vessel. Through attentiveness, gratitude, and quiet devotion, our daily lives become a living offering—our hearts, hands, and homes transformed into sanctuaries of worship.