Ahhh, the little things in life.

Author: Shanel Martens  //  Category: LIFE

Dana-bee mentioned to me some time ago that there were some really cute mugs at Starbuck’s with a little coffee “bean” on the front of it. This is significant because that is an affectionate term we use with Audrey Anne. Our little Coco bean which has turned into “the bean”. As I looked for these mugs I discovered something much better. Good size tea cups with matching saucers that were utterly cute! I had to have them. But with the wisdom and good sense of Brendan (my brother in law), I knew that they would go on sale and I wouldn’t have to pay the absurd price of $12.95 each! So I waited and waited. And finally, they have gone on sale. And bless his heart, Brendan has been scouting the local Starbuck’s for me and found 4 of them for $5 each. And I came across two more myself. Yippee! They are strawberries and blueberries.

img_3656.JPG

The highlight of my morning was drinking a hot cup of joe from my blueberry teacup on the most lovely of all saucers! As I titled this entry, “Ahhh, the little things in life.”

What little things have you been enjoying lately?

-letting out deep sighs-

Author: Shanel Martens  //  Category: Deep thoughts

Memory: I am standing in the door frame of a large warehouse in Murray, Kentucky, with my feet planted and twisting my upper torso to relieve the tension in my back. I am working at a candy company, one of those that makes gift baskets of chocolate covered pretzels and toffee and ships them off at Christmas time to people. I am working for a man who isn’t exactly easy to work for; that is putting it nicely. All of a sudden he says to me with irritation in his voice, “Shanel, why are you always sighing?”

Hmmm. I didn’t know I sighed that much.

In retrospect, I can see clearly. My family and I had just moved from northern California to Murray, Kentucky. Quite a change in scenery in more ways than one. We had come hoping to find some financial relief from the struggle of living in pricey California. We got there and we had no place to live, no place to put all our stuff, no jobs, no schools. It was probably one of the hardest times in my family’s life. We were overwhelmed with heat and thick southern humidity. We were terrified of every bug we saw. We were confused by all the people that would wave at us as we drove down the road thinking they were all quite crazy when really they were just doing their southern hospitality thing. Thunder storms were a spectacular show to us. We were stunned by the fact that we were living in one of the few remaining “dry” counties where they did not permit alcohol. And it was the South and we were from the west coast–the cultural and societal differences were, let’s just say so as to be polite, quite astronomically different.

My dad barely saved my ass by somehow working miracles to get me into the local university for my freshman year of college, after I had written multiple variations of my social security number on all my applications, confusing everyone and thus stalling my admittance to the school. Thinking about it now, I wonder if my dad hadn’t been so persistent and determined, as he is known to be, would I have ever gone to college? With the extreme stress we were under with the transition of moving to a very foreign place away from all that was familiar and home, I could easily see my self just giving up all together on the hope of going to college. I may have never become a nurse. I could have possibly never been a part of InterVarsity where my life was radically changed by the Scriptures and being in community with an amazing group of believers. Things would have turned out so differently. I don’t know if I would have ended up in Chicago. And then there would be no Ivan, no Martens’ clan, no Audrey Anne. I probably would have just moved back to California after that first year if I hadn’t done the college thing and resumed life there in the Coastlands church. Who would I have become? Isn’t it amazing how many roads we can walk down but we choose specific ones and some just open up for us as the only way to go seemingly. I am realizing this is completely tangential to my main point. Sighs.

My frequent sighing continued on for many years and over time, as Jesus brought “vents”, so to speak, to let out my internal angst, sorrow and fear, I sighed less. It wasn’t until I moved to Chicago, after being here a year or two, that the sighing stopped all together. Sighing has always signaled to me that something is askew and turbulent within me. Often, I don’t have much access to understanding or knowing what the turbulence is all about, but I am conscious that it is there.

Lately, I have been sighing more. Something is up. I long for long periods of quiet where I can just breathe, listen, be still and reflect. It’s hard to do that with a lil’ Audrey Anne in your house and trying to juggle three jobs. But I am resourceful. I have had a tradition or discipline of sorts of doing regular retreats of silence. I think it is time for another one. Anyone sighing a lot and want to come with me?

Estrogen overload.

Author: Shanel Martens  //  Category: LIFE

I work with entirely all women. (you know where this is going–)

And today, for whatever reason, maybe it is the full moon coming on Saturday, we are all raging with estrogen.

Bitching, gossiping, back-stabbing, talking mean, complaining, feeling overly sensitive, being triggered, insecurities are high, and everything is blown out of proportion.

Now I find this to be entirely interesting from a psychological standpoint. Seeing all the interactions and talk being evidence of deeper wounds and places of deprivation, fear and insecurity.

But from an ESFJ standpoint (that’s my Myers-Briggs personality type), it is excruciatingly uncomfortable. I like harmony. I like people being okay with me and thinking well of me. I have low tolerance for people’s insecurities and ways they are triggered.

So my goals for the rest of the afternoon and all day tomorrow are to:
1) Keep my mouth shut.
2) Mind my own business.

There you have it.
Any advise from any of you that primarily work with all women?

I know I’m cute (look).

Author: Shanel Martens  //  Category: Audrey Anne

img_3634.JPG

img_3622.JPG

img_3127.JPG

img_3544.JPG