Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The New Year

Since Christmas is over and the new year is about to begin, we start to think about our wonderful New Years resolutions.  I can't remember a time I actually stated a resolution or started a resolution.  I find that most resolutions are the things we should be doing throughout the year anyways.  I thought about some of the most typical one's like excercise more, eat right, stop smoking, limit drinking, etc.  I believe we, as people, want the easiest and most direct route to perfection while bypassing the real reasons we want it.  We want it because others want it for us, everyone does something new at the New Year or I will wait until the timing is perfect (ie: waiting on so and so to do it first or just basically putting it off until the New Year).  Wanting a new you doesn't have to wait for the perfect time of year,  just do it for you.

I thought of my own resolutions, if you want to call them that, and they have nothing to do with body image.
My resolutions go like this:

Be a more faithful servant.
Take the oil painting class at the community college.
Learn to bake something or should I say anything.
Volunteer myself more.
Go to a spa for once, because I really want a massage.
Stop being a procrastinator and be more mindful.
Be a better friend.

I know we all have something we can improve upon, but it is not always on the surface.  Sometimes we need to improve within ourselves or it could be as simple as adding a new craft to enjoy once in a while.  So, I toast to you and the New Year in hopes that it brings peace, prosperity and joy in abundance to your lives. 

Point to ponder:  I believe resolutions can set someone up for failure from the get go and therefore, the New Year becomes too challenging from the start.  I an effort to start the year off right what can you do for yourself or others that would be stress free, worry free, guilt free, thoughtful, playful and down right fun!  I have a few ideas of my own.

Friday, December 25, 2009

Merry Christmas!

What a joyous day and I hope everyone got all they asked Santa for this year.  I am thankful for the many blessings my children and family bring to my life and on this day I am especially thankful!  I wish everyone a wonderful rest of your holiday and very Happy New Year!!!

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The time is now

Hustle and bustle
Hustle and bustle
As Christmas draws near I watch all the people scurrying around to get their last minute gifts for their loved ones. I often wonder if the gifts we buy truly express our feelings for the desired recipients.  Do the gifts actually show our love, affection and appreciation for that person or are they just tokens expected this time of year.

I also wonder what Christmas would be like if everyone lived with the notion that it is better to give than to receive.  I believe that in lieu of a gift you should give of yourself and somewhere along the line a gift will be given back to you.  It may not be a tangible gift, but a gift of the heart.  We are a society of people who put way too much value on material things and not enough in each other.

True acts of kindness are where it's at.  Ask yourself why it has become so hard to just smile at a stranger, to volunteer to feed the poor or to take that childs name off an angel tree and give. It is because we are afraid of taking something away from our own, be it time, food, money, etc.  What we are missing in the whole act of kindness thing, is that we are not taking anything at all, but giving happiness to someone and being that light we are suppose to be in Christ.  A gift, no matter how large or small, has many meanings not only to the giver but to the receiver as well.   So give of yourself, because the gift of pure love and kindness can change a life forever.

Point to ponder:  Not everything we do to  help others is charity, sometimes it is just the right thing to do.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Tradionally

I find us humans to be great creatures of habit.  If I really focused on our repetitive nature and given the season, it would bring my thoughts to holiday traditions. I never found my own family to be much for holiday traditions, but other families I have had the pleasure to get to know have many wonderful traditions.

I guess I should start by first defining a tradition.  According to Webster, a Tradition is the handing down of information, beliefs and customs by word of mouth or by example from one generation to another without written instruction.  I hope there are no written instructions because that would take all the fun out of it.  To me a tradition should come from the heart and be passed down because it has deep meaning and the holiday or event would not be the same without it.  In the whole scheme of things, we all have the tradition of putting up a Christmas Tree and trimming it with lights and ornaments, maybe you sing Christmas carols, or open one gift on Christmas Eve or even have that well awaited wrapping paper fight once it is all said and done. Whatever you do to make this holiday more memorable for your family, one day they too will share the same memories and traditions with their family, as to keep the torch burning for future generations. 

I feel that if you do not have one set tradition you follow, get one!  Kids love to know what to expect on certain occasions because it becomes ingrained in their minds and the excitement just builds from there. I do recall  as a child, my mother making candies for me at Christmas. I don't know if I asked for them or if she did it just because, but for whatever reason I looked forward to the yummy goodness every year!

Point to ponder:  What traditions do you keep alive and what traditions would be fun to start just because?

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Like a canvas


From our earth and by our creator is the most beautiful art of all.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Ode to the Christmas Tree

To me trimming the Christmas tree is the best part about Christmas. I love turning all the lights off in the room and just watching all the ornaments twinkle and glisten.  It is probably the most peaceful and heart warming feeling you can have knowing the holiday presence is there at that moment.

I remember though, as a child, watching all the old Christmas movies and holiday specials with my parents.  One movie comes to mind that always touched my heart.  The movie was called The House without a Christmas Tree.  It was about a man whose wife died shortly after childbirth and he felt no need to celebrate the holidays, much less have a tree, until the day his daughter wins a contest at school and the prize was a Christmas tree.  I won't tell you the rest in case you want to see it, but a house without a Christmas tree is hard to imagine.

Historically, Christmas trees have been a tradition since around the 16th century and symbolize the Christmas spirit. Adorning our homes with the sights, sounds and smells of Christmas not only invites the Christmas spirit in, but also opens our hearts and lives to the joy of new beginnings.

Point to ponder:  Have you ever spent a Christmas without a Christmas tree and if so, how did you feel and what changed the next year?

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Autumn

If everything was created for our pleasure from the earth to the sky, I don't know about you, but I love it. I am mesmorized everyday by the beautiful things in nature. I especially love this time of the year when summer becomes fall and the leaves on the trees turn wonderful shades of orange, red and yellow. They fall to the ground like a blanket to remind us of what is next.

I noticed that not just the plants, but the animals know winter is upon us and they prepare in advance like we do. It is as if you can smell the snow coming. While an animals fur gets thicker, we put on sweaters, while they store food, our menu gets heartier and while they build nests and homes for warmth, we do to. Amazing......

We might be human beings, but we are a part of nature as well. Everything working in harmony like a well oiled machine. Sometimes just taking the time to stop and actually see the small things is showing gratitude to the creator of all beautiful things!

Point to ponder: How do you picture the changing of the seasons? This quote really sums it up for me. "Autumn is a second spring where every leaf is a flower." Albert Camus

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Home for the Holidays

Today I had a very heart felt moment when I thought of the phrase Home for the Holidays.

I am a Real Estate Paralegal by profession and have personally seen the effects of our economy on so many families. People losing their homes and livelihoods to foreclosure in vast numbers, especially this year. As the holidays roll around, sooner than we think, how does one who has been touched by so much misfortune go home for the holidays.

I thought about this for a while and decided that, no matter where you are, a home is a place where your heart lives. A place where you surround yourself with loved ones, pets included. Home can be the place in our memories that we return to often to relive our childhood, to remember mommas cookin' or just to escape to a time that reminds us of great joy.

Even though, when our hearts feel like home is so far away and the longing for that familiar place some how escapes us, we can always have faith and embrace the present and know that the future is yet to be seen.

Point to ponder: During this wonderful time of year, what can we ALL do to help someone feel at Home for the Holidays?

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Reason for the Season

I ask myself, is Christ in Christmas?

I've come to believe, that for whatever reason, Christ is not in Christmas anymore and people have truly lost sight of why we share this special day. Instead, Christmas time has become this random day we give ourselves permission to be frivolous overspenders without remote concern for the consequences of such insanity.

It is not O.K. to take this blessed time of the year for granted. If we take the gifts out of the equation what would we have left?

What is left is the true meaning of the season. Love, thankfulness, family, friends, blessings, reflections from the year and an appreciation for everyday we have life! There is definately a reason for the season.

Point to ponder: If you had no money to even buy a gift, what would you do instead? Maybe, in a humble way, you would just give a hug!

Troubleshoot

If only part of the blog shows, click on There is a reason under blog archive to the right. Thanks.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

There is a reason

Welcome, thank you for stopping in. I was thinking today about some of the philosophies I live my life by, hence the name of my blog, but first let me introduce myself.

I call myself Kelly Ann and I live on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. The OBX is a beautiful place on the edge of no where. Better described, more or less, as a quaint fishing village for the city folk who want a mix of art, food, fish and fun on island time and close to their actual homes. I call it paradise, viewed through optomistic eyes, knowing this place gets crazy in the summer and sheer boredom in the winter. But, there is a reason...

I have always believed everything happens for a reason and nothing is a mistake. There is a reason I moved from San Diego to the OBX, a reason why I met my boyfriend of several years here, a reason I married 3 times and had 3 kids and so on and so forth. I must say though, there is a reason for this blog. There is something spiritual about cleansing our souls of life in general, whether we use art, music or words the need to express our wounds is evident in all we do.

We all have a reason to exist. We all have a message to send and I hope this blog will be an outlet for all to voice or share opinions and reasons that in some way will impact others positively. I hope this blog will create a faithful community where relationships can be born and grow out of ideas.

A point to ponder: Store bought or handmade at Christmas?
I feel consumerism has overshadowed the true meaning of Christmas and that a handmade gift is a direct reflection of the heart.