Tag Archives: body

When You Feel Like You’re Just Treading Water

These past few weeks, I drove to Massachussets, swooped across states to Chicago, flew to Florida to start a new job, and returned, all on the heels of a big decision for my husband and I. We’re selling our house, figuring out new job set-ups for both of us, and trying to fit in as much good friends and family time as possible before we leave.

And I can’t say that I have been very healthy or balanced in my approach to braving the transition. I am, however, learning as I go, and have found a few things to be helpful:

Take care of your body. I found this gem of insight from Scottish scholar and evangelist Henry Drummond:

“If you would know God’s will in the higher [realm], you must begin with God’s will in the lower; which simply means this — that if you want to live the ideal life, you must begin with the ideal body. The law of moderation, the law of sleep, the law of regularity, the law of exercise, the law of cleanliness — this is the law or will of God for you. This is the first law, the beginning of His will for you.”

In other words, eat well, rest, exercise, take your vitamins, make that chiropractor appointment you’ve been putting off because you’re too busy (I am completely writing to myself here). These are the essentials that fly out the window as soon as we feel stressed, but without them, our work and our faith will suffer the effects. We need to care for our bodies so that we can use them for the good work to which we are called.

Strike a balance. Sleep, good time with my husband, reading and writing, and even just sitting are important. And if I don’t make time for them, I will fool myself into thinking that I have to be wired up 24/7. But my days will be far more enjoyable and far more effective if I don’t cram them full with “to do” items.

Follow the advice of Psalm 127:2: ”In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat— for he grants sleep to those he loves.” It’s a false assumption that by sacrificing our rest and well-being we can get ahead.

This often means exercising the discipline of saying “no” to an otherwise good opportunity. We can’t do it all. Don’t take on an extra project that will have you working late into the night, even if the compensation is tempting.

Let go of guilt. I’m generalizing here, but it seems to me that women have a particularly strong tendency to sink into the guilt of what we haven’t accomplished in a day. But I want to feel good about what I’ve done at the end of the day, and I’m realizing the difference is determined not by tasks, but by outlook. If I am realistic about what I want to accomplish, then I am more likely to feel content about what I am able to do. And if I don’t get something done, I am learning to give myself grace.

When you’re busy and stressed, what is usually the first thing to go? What ways have you found to keep a healthy balance? 

 

Sex, Yoga, and Your Church Potluck: A Round-up of Conversations about Embodied Faith

My young adult life has been a pendulum swinging erratically between the transcendent and the tangible. I have lived the Gnostic creed that the body is grotesque and competes with the spirit, and I have held my body hostage to the feminine ideal, obsessed with image.

 It wasn’t until my senior year in college that my fragmented perspective of my faith and my body began to heal, and it was because for the first time I really encountered the Incarnation. That’s another story for another day. I’d like to say that the church community helped me navigate these extremes, but unfortunately it was something I felt left to figure out on my own.

Which is why I’m thrilled to see so many solid conversations taking place just this week about embodied faith. Please take a few minutes today, settle down with your coffee, and drink this in…And to those who hosted these conversations, bravo and thank you. Let’s keep it going.

God Has a Wonderful Plan for your Body: It includes sex, diet, and sports–but so much more.  via Christianity Today. Matthew Lee Anderson gives an admirably balanced view of issues surrounding the body rooted in a practical theology of the Incarnation. He fairly explains how Christians have “sometimes been clumsy in our efforts to see how the Word should shape the flesh,” and how we can create a holistic understanding of our bodily existence that is more than just “to yoga, or not to yoga?”

While you’re at it, check out his new book: Earthen Vessels

The Secret Assault by Gary Thomas on Boundless.org. Gary Thomas makes  a convicting point: if you cannot obey God in the small things, how will you obey Him in greater things? He paraphrases late 19th century teacher Henry Drummond, “Let a man disobey God in gluttony, laziness or unncleanness, and you have no certainty that he has any true principle for obeying God in anything else; for God’s will does not only run into the church and the prayer-meeting and the higher chambers of the soul, but into the common rooms at home down to the wardrobe and larder and cellar, and into the bodily frame down to blood and muscle and brain.”

Let’s be clear: gluttony does not a judgment of weight. It means excess and lack of control. It may take the form of obesity, or an uncontrollable coffee habit, of which I have been caught in the act.

The Immorality of Gluttony: Should Healthy Living be a Spiritual Discipline? on RELEVANTmagazine.com. Marcus Thompson returns the concept of community to food, advocating family dinners, setting a healthy example, and breaking bread as a church community, not only as a way to put a stop to the alarming trend of childhood obesity but as a spiritual practice as well.

What has helped you build a biblical understanding of our physical and spiritual selves? If you have any resources or links, I’d love your thoughts and recommendations!

A Different Kind of Gluttony

Last week my husband and I were suffering from cabin fever after a few rainy days, and we decided to get out of the house and grab some coffee and a good book somewhere. Wheeling into the parking lot of Barnes and Noble, we noticed a family of three walking toward their car.

They had just come out of the all-you-can-eat buffet in the strip mall, two parents and a son who looked about eight years old, and all of them a doctor would diagnose with obesity.

So sad, Zach and I said to each other. I wondered what kind of future that child would have, would he be teased? Would he feel like he wouldn’t amount to anything? And what about the parents? What is it they are trying to escape through food? Do they eat here all the time? Do they care that their kid is severely overweight and inheriting their own unhealthiness?

All sorts of disapproving and critical thoughts ran through my head. And then I walked into the bookstore café and bought a $4 espresso drink.

“Are you sure you don’t want a venti, it’s only 60 cents more?” The barista lobbied, as they are trained to do with every customer. I declined. “Do you want a pastry or a sandwich to go with that?” No thanks. They definitely know how to capitalize on the classic impulse buy.

It was only after I was catered to at the coffee bar that I realized I was choosing the same gluttony I had just condemned. I didn’t need an espresso drink topped with whipped cream, I was just indulging. I was paying $4 for something that I knew was overpriced and nonessential.

This year I have been discovering a new way of eating, exploring where my food comes from, the ethics of my culinary choices, such as fair labor treatment and environmental responsibility, and trying to make better food choices in general. And while I am privileged American to be able to choose between pricey organic meat or canned green beans, not everyone has that privilege. Hunger is a real issue in the world just as much as obesity is, and both claim lives.

I’m not against caramel macchiatos, but I hope I don’t consume them ignorantly, as this last experience taught me. I hope I will realize the weight of my food choices, and if I’m going to exercise my privileges, I hope I will also donate to world hunger relief organizations, contribute to my church’s food pantry, and pray for and remember those who don’t have the same privileges God has so graciously given.

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