I’m “Beyond the Pew” at The Practicing Catholic

Today, as part of the Catholic Family Fun Book Tour, it’s an honor to be to guest posting at The Practicing Catholic, where I’m sharing “Beyond the Pew: Being Catholic in the Rest of Our Lives.”

When I’m standing in front of the room of fifth-graders, grabbing their attention from the arm wrestling or fashion talk with captivating tales of adventure, it’s easy to be Catholic.

When I’m sharing with another mom why I value spiritual direction so much, it’s easy to be Catholic.

When I’m penning an article or writing a blog post, it’s easy to be Catholic.

And then there’s the REST of my life.

Read the rest at The Practicing Catholic.

My Writing in Other Places Last Week

Here’s what I’ve been doing in other spaces this week…

New Evanglizers and Smiling

I link to a speech from Dolan, share some thoughts of my own, and use a picture that can only be described as cutesy.

The New Evangelization is a dare? I can’t help but think back to the games of Truth or Dare I played in my younger, wilder days, and it certainly gives this work we’re all out to accomplish a different feel.

If it’s a dare, then there’s risk. Possibly a lot of risk.

Join me there.

Mary Moment at iPadre

My latest Mary Moment is a bit of a trip down memory lane.

It’s hard to believe that, in mid-April, I celebrate my 11th year as a Catholic.

When I think of my ongoing Catholic journey, which began about 15 years ago, I can’t help but think of Mary’s role.

And Father Jay Finelli’s Divine Mercy homily is just great.

Listen here.

Tech Talk at CatholicMom.com

I discovered some serious coolness when I found CatholicApps.com, and my Tech Talk column this week shares it with the world.

I discovered my new favorite website quite by accident: I was procrastinating on something I should have been doing and lo and behold! The answer to my Catholic appaholic dreams!

Read it all.

Review at Integrated Catholic Life

I’ve talked with Emily Stimpson and about her book quite a bit in the last week (which got me dubbed her unofficial #1 fan!), and here’s more of that in my column at Integrated Catholic Life.

Emily Stimpson’s new book, The Catholic Girl’s Survival Guide for the Single Years: The Nuts and Bolts of Staying Sane and Happy While Waiting for Mr. Right might seem like an odd choice for my reading list.

Believe me, no one was more surprised than I was when I put my novel down for a couple of days so that I could turn the pages faster. (And it was agood novel!) You could have never told me that not only would I love this book, I would mark passages, dogear pages, and want to share it with a lot of women, both married and single.

Read it all.

Review & Giveaway at CatholicMom.com

My latest review and giveaway at CatholicMom.com is of a great book:

It probably reveals way too much about me that, a chapter or two into Marge Fenelon‘s new book, Strengthening Your Family: A Catholic Approach to Holiness at Home, I was struggling with feelings of inadequacy and wondering if I could hire Marge to come and mother my children.

It speaks highly of this book, then, that I was able to feel pretty hopeful about myself and my future after I finished reading it.

Read it all and enter to win.

Blog Talk at Catholic Writers Guild Blog

I’m not sure when I became an expert on blogging, but I find myself, most weeks, sharing some tidbits over at the Catholic Writers Guild blog. This week, I share some of what I’ve been doing to promote my book through my blog.

Now that I have a few books under my belt, I can speak from experience about using my blog to promote my book.

At least, I think I can.

Read the rest.

Sometimes, it’s just easier to be naked

I’ve discovered something about myself recently, and it came by way of a friend.

She recounted how, as she was sharing in front of a group of her fellow parishioners, she suddenly realized she might have been sharing too much.

“But it felt right,” she said. “The Spirit was at work. Suddenly, I felt so naked.”

I knew just what she meant. I find it myself, especially when I stand in front of my fifth-grade religious education class.

There they are, innocent and with so much life in front of them. They’re rowdy and energetic and ready to laugh in an instant.

They are tackling the big questions in life, and in the midst of the shrugs and rolling eyes, I catch a glimpse, now and then, of just how much they want to love their faith, of how passionate they long to be.

They see me, every week, make a fool of myself. I get fired up and heated and I have even been known to raise my voice.

I do the same thing, times ten, with a group of Confirmation students every summer. I can’t help it: I remember, so well, those years. I too wanted something to believe in. I too wanted something to grasp.

Do they know what to make of me? Will they remember anything we have discussed? For that matter, will they continue to Jesus in the Eucharist after these classes are a distant memory?

I’ve bared my soul to groups of adults too, but it’s far harder. Suddenly, I’m in a peer group. Suddenly, there’s a part of me worried about what they think. Suddenly, I wonder if maybe I’m wrong, if it’s not really the Spirit but some part of me.

There’s a distance we have thanks to the many screens in our lives. It’s not so hard to say what I think or feel when I’m just typing words to a theoretical world. But when I’m looking them in the face, when I’m feeling their reaction in person, it makes a difference in me.

That difference is hard, pushing me in ways I don’t want to be, pulling me closer to God if I let it. Sometimes, I think, it’s easier just to be naked in front of the crowd.

This “Finding Faith in Everyday Life” column originally appeared in The Catholic Times

image source: MorgueFile

Writing Here and There

At CatholicMom.com: 

Tech Talk: Laudate, An App Worth Downloading

A while back, when I was looking for Rosary app recommendations for Droid users, a friend of mine called Laudate (then Catholic One) her “one stop” app for all things Catholic.

I felt sort of sorry for her, truth be told. I’m an Apple user, and my iPad apps are just, well, prettier than what I saw then on Droids.

The folks at Catholic One changed their name to Laudate (which, near as I can tell, is Latin for “Praise”) and now they’re billing themselves as the #1 free Catholic app on iTunes, too. –> Read the rest.

A Survival Guide & Giveaway You Don’t Have to Be Single to Appreciate

In early March, I was blessed to be participating as a blogger at the Behold Conference in Peoria, Illinois. While I was there, I met a delightful woman who, it just so happened, had a personality that made me want to read her book. She had just penned an article that week that grabbed my attention, and meeting her made me pick up her book right away, despite a review shelf that’s begging to be emptied soon.

How had I never heard of Emily Stimpson before? –> Read the rest.

At the Catholic Writers Guild blog: 

What I Love about Being Catholic Online

Every week, I encourage you to keep going with your blogging. I share tips and advice to the best of my ability. I try to be candid and not too idealistic.

Blogging’s hard work. But, as I was reminded recently, so is life. Period.

Last week, I had a bit of a family emergency. It took over my life, and it also made me appreciate, once again, why I so treasure my online Catholic community. –> Read the rest.

At New Evangelizers: 

Making an Old Story New

When I stand in front of my fifth grade class as a catechist, animated and enthusiastic, and mention “Easter,” I can see their eyes start to glaze over.

“Isn’t Easter just about coloring eggs and icing cookies?” their initial reactions seem to say. ”Isn’t it a chance to eat chocolate and see family? Isn’t Easter just an old story we talk about over and over every year?”

I found this reaction when I started to talk to these kids about the wonder of Christmas, too.

 

A Few Questions, a Few Answers at Of Sound Mind & Spirit

Over at Of Sound Mind and Spirit, I’m answering a few questions (in 140 characters or less, I’d like to add) about Catholic Family Fun, my writing process, my playlists, and yes, my favorite activity from the book.

Stop on over!

Wisdom and Insight from Christina

If you haven’t heard of Christina Ries, you’ve surely heard of a website that she’s highly involved with: Catholic Match.

If you’re like me, you follow her Twenty Something columns in your diocesan newspaper (which still have her maiden name, Capecchi, on them).

The official scoop: Christina’s an award-winning writer and editor from St. Paul, Minnesota. She earned her master’s in journalism at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She has a love for the Twins and grilled cheese, from what I understand.

I got my hands on Christina Ries’s new book, The Catholic Playbook: Lenten Reflections for Singles, but didn’t have time during Lent to do anything with it.

It’s a great book, though, and Christina was kind enough to entertain a few of my questions.

What inspired you to start writing?

I’ve been compelled to tell stories since I was a young girl, even before I could write. It’s a way to make sense of my world, to figure out how I feel and why and to share my most dearly held hopes and ideals.

What advice would you give other Catholic writers?

Let creativity flow! Read great stuff, study it, pass it on. Dwell in that place of inspiration.

And don’t save your best stuff for later. Use it today. It could open doors and spark new ideas.

If you were to share one piece of wisdom, what would it be?

Never underestimate the power of gratitude. It opens our eyes and our hearts to life’s blessings, which can then multiply.

Mary Oliver described gratitude as a way of living: “Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.” That is the charge of a writer and of a Catholic.

I’m proud to come from a long line of women who send handwritten thank-you notes. They’ve taught me that gratitude isn’t a state, it’s an action. In our age of texting and tweeting, I find it therapeutic to pick up a pen, seal an envelope, press a stamp and drop my thoughts into the mailbox.

And don’t rule out the people closest to you. This past December was the first time I’ve ever sent my parents a thank-you note for my Christmas gifts. I guess they were just never on the list. They were the ones I could skip, you know?

To prepare I jotted all the presents they’d given me on a scrap of paper so I wouldn’t leave anything out – they’re very generous – and the day the card arrived my dad made a special trip to give me a hug and tell me it was the best thank-you note he’d ever received.

Totally worth 44 cents.

What do you hope people take away from your book? 

I’m pleased with the variety of reflections contained in The Catholic Playbook: Lenten Reflections for Singles. Bishop Kevin Rhoades said they express “the full range of human emotions,” and he’s right.

I hope the book reminds people that wherever they’re at, however they feel, whatever they’re struggling with, there’s a place for all those emotions in prayer and in the Christian life. We can fold all our trials and triumphs into Lent – or any liturgical season. As Catholic mothers across generations have been known to say, we can “offer it up.”

What’s your favorite part of the book?

The second reflection, which begins on page 15. It was written by a Wisconsin widow named Barb who lost her husband and son in a short period and is now welcoming her second grandchild, Grace Elizabeth, and trying to rediscover joy.

“God is good all the time,” Barb writes, “we just have to read between the lines.”

Barb contributes to the CatholicMatch blog, which I manage. We publish original material every day, and her essays are lovely. You can read them here.

In daily life it’s easy to forget about widows and widowers. That’s why they are so grateful for CatholicMatch’s supportive community, where they can heal and pray with others who have been through the loss of a spouse and are hoping for another great love.

A New Catholic Family Fun Activity & the Riparian Viewpoint

Something New

One of the promises I made recently was that I would be writing new activities for the Catholic Family Fun website.

I said Yes before I had ANY IDEA what I would write.

You know, because all the good ideas are already used, as in PUBLISHED IN THE BOOK.

Nevertheless, I did post an activity for April. And it’s something even I can handle and will be doing repeatedly with my own family.

Are you curious? Are you excited? Are you wondering what I have up my sleeve?  –> Go check it out!

(While you’re there, you can sign up to get an email newsletter that will have a new activity once a month and a “Just for Moms” reflection once a month.)

Something Nice

On the book tour note, Jennifer Fitz shares, in her review of Catholic Family Fun at Riparians at the Gate, some great observations.

You know how women’s magazines have those little articles about fun things to do with your family?  This is like 10 years of those ideas all in one place.  Only you are spared those obnoxious photos of pristine toaster ovens and closets organized by that sect of hermits who take a vow to own nothing but three pieces of splashy, sassy, ready-for-spring ensembles to pair with their strappy heels.  Also, no perfume ads.

She goes on with some further detail, which I have to say, made me want to read the book. Especially the part where she gives it the official Curmudgeon Stamp of Approval:

What if you are, in fact, the grumpy, curmudgeonly type? See the next section.  I advise letting your kids pick the activities.  That way you never need fear you’ve gotten all goofy and relaxed for nothing.  Also you could tell the kids you aren’t going to do Chapters 1 and 2 yourself, but you’ll give them five bucks if they’ll just be quiet while your finish reading the paper.  (Um, wait a minute.  No, that’s not how the book’s supposed to work.  Oops.)  Chapters 3-9 are Curmudgeon-Safe, though the one idea about a backyard circus makes me a little nervous . . .

My thanks to Jen for her review and for the great ideas she gave me! The list of people who will benefit from the book? Priceless! (Yes, I will be “borrowing” those!) The idea to include a package of bacon with the book for Mother’s Day? Brilliant!

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...