Sometimes trusting God is like night driving.
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Moving through the darkness.
Trying to make out the signs.
With just enough light to see the road that’s before me.
Katie SwiftPHOTOGRAPHERSometimes trusting God is like night driving.
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Moving through the darkness.
Trying to make out the signs.
With just enough light to see the road that’s before me.
Don’t ever tell me I can’t do something.
Unless you’re God. Or a police officer.
“If you judge people you have no time to love them.” -Mother Teresa
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Grace begins in the mirror.
Our backyard is like a desert wasteland (minus the warmth and sunshine).
I look out the kitchen window and expect to see a tumbleweed blowing by.
It’s a big yard but we have no trees, no patio.
We have a florida room made of aluminum that does not make me feel like I’m in Florida.
A chainlink fence warped up at the bottom that will not keep your dog from running away.
A blue, plastic baby pool, some broken adirondack chairs, and toys litter the dead grass lawn.
A teddy bear that got left out in the rain, Savannah’s plastic shopping cart turned on it’s side, a big pink ball,
and a stroller with a naked Dora doll stuffed awkwardly in it.
If we lived in a trailer park we would fit in just fine.
Honestly I don’t even mind being that neighbor, but I do feel some mom guilt when I tell the kids to go outside and play.
Like they are so deprived because they don’t have their own personal cedar stained playground
or a huge trampoline to bounce on or some other great invention that costs us parents loads of money.
Like our wasteland backyard is a symbol of my neglect.
My poor children who are forced to “go play” where they have nothing fun to play with.
Or maybe not.
Maybe there’s a lot to discover.
Here’s what I found in my backyard (in the tacky baby pool):
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It’s almost April and it’s snowing. I’m ready for spring.
I’m ready for sunshine and thunderstorms, cut-offs and bare feet.
I’m ready to go play!
But today I’ve been given an ice heart in a baby pool.
And I’m sending it on to you Ohio, with love.
Sometimes the best way to describe parenting is through the children themselves.
My son Jonah, for example just has a knack for expressing the Monday Morning Grumpies..jpg)
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No amount of reasoning, sweet talk or bribery can cure the grumpies.
My son David shows the best way to react to these situations..jpg)
Everyday I ask God to help me be a good mother.
To show me what that even means.
Sometimes the answers are right in front of me (even if they are a little blurry).
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I can complicate things so much in my mind.
I always have lists and lists of things that must get done.
But the longer I am a parent the more I am clinging to the good old fashioned serenity prayer.
“God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can and the wisdom to know the difference.”
The wisdom of God usually comes to me in a whisper. And most often in this season of crazy busy life that I am in, it tells me to
Stop.
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And really look around me. And really see my kids. .jpg)
And have fun..jpg)
Even if it means dirty windows.
It’s not always easy. Actually it NEVER is.
But surrender is not passive. It is not weak. And it knows how to fight.
And it is saving my life by letting me actually live it- one day at a time.
And today, I am enjoying the ride.
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Follow me on instagram @katieswiftphotography

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