Showing posts with label God-and-you stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God-and-you stories. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Back to Basics: Your stories are all around even if you don’t recognize them

 

Your stories are everywhere, all around you, just waiting for you to put them in writing.

 

Look at your cell phone contact list, your address book, email inbox, friends on Facebook and other social media. What stories can you write about the fun you had with them? About the adventures? What skills did those people teach you?

 

Go deeper: What did you learn alongside them about failure, hard work, success, romance, illness, teamwork? What lessons did they teach you?

 

Think back: Who taught you about honesty, integrity, perseverance, kindness, compassion, generosity, faith in God? How, specifically, did those individuals shape you and encourage you to be the person you are today?

 

Stories are everywhere—not just stories. God-and-you stories.

 

 Look around your office or your house. What have you tucked into a special drawer or a safe deposit box?

 

If a tornado siren sounded, or if a smoke alarm went off, what would you grab and take to a safe place?

 

If those items could talk, what stories would they tell?

 

I think about that question a lot.

 

Someday I want to write stories based on my old blue American Tourister carry-on bag. It traveled with me for thirty years across three continents: from this planet’s most primitive places to the world’s most sophisticated cities. What stories it could tell!

 

What stories would my husband’s grandmother’s aluminum colander tell? And her ironing board? I don’t know how many years Grandma Jennings used them, but I’ve used them for more than fifty years! Five generations of our family (so far) have used those items. Imagine what stories they could tell—stories of God’s goodness to our family, generation after generation.

 

Why have you thrown out some possessions 

but kept others for many years?

 

Why could you never throw them out or give them away? 

Because they represent something important to you. 

What is that something?

 

Look around and ask yourself:

 

“If this dining room table could talk, what stories would it tell?”

 

“If my old Bible could talk, what stories would it tell?”

 

“If these boots could talk, what stories would they tell?”

 

What about a photo? A book? Washing machine? Piece of art? Jewelry? Woodworking tools? Coffee mug? Mechanical tools? Art supplies? A vase? A favorite old devotional book?

 

Many items could tell stories—stories significant to you and your family.

 

Glenda Bonin suggests we interview key people—and even ourselves.

 

“Don’t be timid about interviewing yourself and others,” Glenda writes. “A good interviewer asks questions and waits for answers. . . . Listen deeply, allowing as much time as needed for quiet moments of thought. Do not rush in with a new question until you are satisfied that the question has been fully explored. . . . These moments are often where the best family stories can be found. . . .”

 

I like Glenda’s suggestion: Interview others, yes, but also interview yourself, and “listen deeply, allowing as much time as needed. . . .”

 

You might even schedule a time to think, to ponder an item’s importance. Or maybe you could contemplate while you drive to work or mow the lawn or walk the dog.

 

What questions do you need to ask?

 

What questions do you need to ask yourself?

 

Peel back layers. 

Wait for answers. Listen for them.

 

When answers surface, write your stories—

not just stories. Write God-and-you stories.

 

Remember, while you’ve been using and enjoying those items, God has always been with you, working in you, working on your behalf.

 

You don’t need to experience news-making miracles to witness God at work. He is in your everyday comings and goings.

 

As Oswald Chambers says,

 

“We look for visions from heaven

and for earth-shaking events

to see God’s power. . . .

Yet we never realize that

all the time God is at work

in our everyday events

and in the people around us.”

 

Write your stories!

 

 

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

What stories could they tell?


“Stories are all around us,” writes Glenda Bonin.

“They reside in people, places and things, and are waiting to be discovered.”

So true.

Not just stories: God-and-you stories.

Take a fresh look at possessions you could never give away or throw out.

What do you store in a special drawer or safe deposit box?

What would you stash in a safe place if tornado sirens sounded? What would you grab if your smoke alarm went off?

Look around and identify something you’ve owned for years and use a lot.

If those items could talk, what would they tell?

I think about that question—a lot.

A few years ago I gave away a set of dishes to a family that lost everything in a fire. I tucked a note inside that read:

“I bought these dishes in Africa and we used them during our seventh and eighth years there, and here in the States all these years since then. While you use them, ask yourself, ‘If these dishes could talk, what stories would they tell?’”

Some day I want to write—I need to write—stories based on my old blue American Tourister carry-on bag (a gift from Schiefelbeins in 1993—thanks Rick and Marilyn!).

That bag has traveled with us for 27 years now—from this planet’s most primitive places to the world’s most sophisticated cities. What stories it could tell! Not just stories, but God-and-me-stories.

What stories could my husband’s grandmother’s aluminum colander tell? My mother-in-law passed it on to me 53 years ago. And yes, it could tell stories—stories about five generations so far. My daughter has asked me to pass it on to her eventually. Who knows how many more generations will tell stories about it?

Look at your dining room table. Ask yourself, “If it could talk, what stories would it tell?” (Click to read two of my posts, Vera Bachman’s Table, and Your dinner table memories.)

“If these old boots could talk, what stories would they tell?” (See my recent post about my safari boots at The dust of Africa had penetrated my skin pores and entered into my soul.)

If your old Bible could talk, what stories would it tell?

What about a photo? A photo album? A book?

A washing machine?

A piece of art? Jewelry? A scarf?

Your dad’s old hat?

Your mother’s old coffee mug?

Your grandmother’s rocking chair?

Your old high school yearbook?

“Don’t be timid about interviewing yourself and others,” continues Glenda.

“A good interviewer asks questions and waits for answers. . . . Listen deeply, allowing as much time as needed for quiet moments of thought. Do not rush in with a new question until you are satisfied that the question has been fully explored.

“It is not unusual for one question to lead to another. . . . These moments are often where the best family stories can be found. . . .” (Glenda Bonin at Storyteller.net)

Remember: while you’ve been using and cherishing those items, God has been alongside you, working in you, working on your behalf.

Stories are all around. 
You don’t need news-making miracles 
to witness God at work. 
He is in your everyday comings and goings.


“We look for visions from heaven
and for earth-shaking events to see God’s power.
Yet we never realize that all the time
God is at work in our everyday events. . . .”

Write your stories!
Leave a legacy for your kids, grandkids, 
and great-grands!





Thursday, March 16, 2017

Your stories: Where do you find them?


Your stories are all around you, just waiting for you to put them in writing.

Look at your cell phone contact list, your address book, your Facebook friends, your email inbox, your Twitter friends—what stories can you write about some of those people?

What stories can you write about the fun you had with them? About the adventures? What did you learn alongside them about failure, hard work, success, romance, illness, teamwork?

What skills did those people teach you?

What lessons did they teach you?

Who taught you about honesty, integrity, perseverance, kindness, compassion, generosity, faith in God? How, specifically, did those individuals shape you and encourage you to be the person you are today?

Write your stories! But not just stories. God-and-you stories.

Stories are everywhere. Look around your office or your house. What have you tucked into a special drawer or a safe deposit box?

If a tornado siren sounded, or if a smoke alarm went off, what would you grab and take to a safe place?

If those items could talk, what stories would they tell?

I think about that question a lot.

Someday I want to write stories based on my old blue American Tourister carry-on bag (a gift from Schiefelbeins before Dave and I left for Africa; thanks, Rick and Marilyn!). It has traveled with me for 24 years and counting, across three continents: from this planet’s most primitive places to the world’s most sophisticated cities—and what stories it could tell! Not just stories, but God-and-me stories.

What stories would my husband’s grandmother’s aluminum colander tell? And her ironing board? I don’t know how many years Grandma Jennings used them, but I’ve used them for 50 years! Five generations of our family (so far) have used those items. Imagine what stories they could tell—stories of God’s faithfulness to our family, generation after generation.

Why have you thrown out some possessions but kept others for many years?

Why could you never throw them out or give them away? Because they represent something important to you. What is that something?

Look around and ask yourself:

“If this dining room table could talk, what stories would it tell?”

“If my old Bible could talk, what stories would it tell?”

“If these boots could talk, what stories would they tell?”

What about a photo? A book? Washing machine? Piece of art? Jewelry? Woodworking tools? Coffee mug? Mechanical tools? Art supplies? A vase? A favorite old devotional book?

Many items could tell stories—stories significant to you and your family.

Set aside time to think about a key item. Ponder its importance: while you drive to work or mow the lawn or brush your teeth or walk the dog or drive the grandkids to baseball practice.

Look at old photos connected with the item—photos of places and people.

What questions do you need to ask?

What questions do you need to ask yourself?

Peel back layers. Wait for answers. Listen for them.

When answers surface, write your storiesnot just stories. Write God-and-you stories.

Remember, while you’ve been using and enjoying those items, God has always been with you, working in you, working on your behalf.

Your stories are all around you. You don’t need to experience news-making miracles to witness God at work. He is in your everyday comings and goings.

Oswald Chambers says it this way:

“We look for visions from heaven
and for earth-shaking events
to see God’s power.
Yet we never realize that
all the time God is at work
in our everyday events….”


Write your stories!