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Welcome! My name is Amy. I'm a photographer, writer, and hopeful photography venue and wedding venue owner. My greatest passion is to help you see the significance of your story. Make yourself at home, take a peek around the site, and pop on over to the Meet Amy page if you'd like to learn more about my story. I'm so glad you're here.
“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He set eternity in the human heart; yetno one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11
God knows our hearts intimately.
He created us, made us, fashioned us fine.
He knows what makes us tick, knows what makes us cry.
He knows all of us, every part of us, the beautiful, upside down, inside out bits of us.
When we step out in faith, He reveals His purpose, His best, His grand design for our lives on earth and into eternity, too.
When you know, you just know – this moment is a gift from God, this opportunity is a gift from God, this place and this time is a gift from the only One who could give it.
So when we received confirmation that Ginny and two band members would, indeed, be spending the night at our home, I knew it was a gift. Sent from heaven alone.
God knows whose writing and singing heart matches mine most closely. Ann Voskamp. Sara Groves. And Ginny Owens. So He sent one, the only one I needed now. Ginny Owens. To perform in our home, to be present, to give me a taste of heaven.
When everyone cleared the concert, she asked how she could help. A beautiful servant heart, indeed.
She loves washing dishes, so we stood side by side. She washed. I dried. It was simple, really. Whole. Lovely. Pure.
The concert was amazing. But this washing dishes together was the greatest gift, the quietest, most heavenly gift.
Depth of conversation came the next morn around the breakfast table. But this washing dishes together was one human heart plus one human heart doing life together.
Wash. Dry.
Wash. Dry.
Wash. Dry.
We chatted. Milk spilled and puddled around Ginny’s boots and I checked her dress for milk spots. Band members, Dave and Andrew, ate late night pizza at our kitchen table. I brought the kids to bed and came back down again.
Ginny and I washed and dried everything but the awkward glass beverage containers, then called it a night.
It was slow.
Good.
Simple.
Rich.
One of the greatest gifts I’ve received.
God says…I know you. I know both of you. I brought you together for such a time as this.
This washing and drying, this living side by side, this being God’s beautiful, holy creations complementing one another? This is a taste of heaven. Taste. Believe. Receive the gift. For it is given most kindly, most affectionately, most intimately.
Eternity.
It’s set in our hearts.
He speaks when the time is right, reminds us of the beauty before us.
I honestly can’t remember how it all went down or what the conversational context was, but shortly after we dispersed from the photo, Ginny said these words to me – totally unprompted, mind you.
Ginny disagreed, “You are SO fun! You opened up your home to all these people and let us perform!”
Hmmm…
The conversation moved on. I didn’t have much more to say about that, but deep down Ginny’s words struck me like gold.
I’m fun? Really?
She sees me as fun? Really?
There’s no way it’s true.
I’m so NOT fun. I’m one of the most serious people I know. I take everything to heart and have been told hundreds of times to have more fun and be more excited about life.
I woke up again at 3:00 a.m. and was up wide awake until 4:30 a.m.
Seems there was a battle in the middle of that night. A battle between good vs. evil, a battle between doubt and belief, a battle between the night being an amazing miracle and the night being pretty good with a few mishaps here and there, a battle of wondering why I was mostly serious and if I was even just a little bit fun.
I hope everyone had an amazing night.
I didn’t get to say good bye to LeeAnn & Ed.
I hope so and so felt welcome.
I feel bad that three people from Aaron’s party weren’t able to make it to the concert.
And what about that sort-of-awkward moment when I might’ve dove far too deep into someone else’s most serious conversation?
Why didn’t I get a picture of me and Monica with Ginny? I should have publicly thanked Monica for encouraging me to host the concert.
I feel bad that I broke up Ginny’s awesome mentoring conversation with Jessica Joy.
I didn’t thank Jim and Dianne enough for all of their help today and they stayed far too long and late.
Oh man.
The enemy came crashing into this middle-of-the-night adrenaline rush party of mine. His intention was to steal, destroy and kill all the joy and peace I ever felt about the Ginny Owens concert that had just happened in my house. But God wasn’t having any of that.
Sometime during my 3:00-4:30 waking, I remembered Ginny’s words.
“You’re so fun.”
What was that?
Why did she say I was fun?
What made her say and believe so quickly and easily that I was FUN?
I was all in for Ginny’s song about God “Call[ing] Me Beautiful.” But “Call Me Fun?” Not so much.
That’s when I remembered. In the middle of the pitch black room all by myself. Overdosed on adrenaline.
I remembered the 10-year-old 1986 self from home videos. The video where I rode my sky blue bike with a sky blue, orange and white striped banana seat. I was proud and true. I wasn’t afraid of what the camera thought or anyone else for that matter. I spoke my mind. I wore my homemade red backpack and striped polo shirt and stood straight and tall. I was clearly a FUN girl.
Tears came to my eyes. I felt the Spirit rush over me, reminding me that while God made me mostly serious, contemplative and thoughtful, a true INFJ at heart, He also made me FUN.
Ginny’s words had opened my eyes.
Ginny spoke what she perceived and believed to be true. She perceived and believed that I was FUN. The absolute LAST word I would use to describe myself. But God knew I needed to hear it.
He whispered it in the dark of night as I lay in bed unable to sleep. While I might not be aware of it, while I might not acknowledge it, God made a part of me to be FUN.
Sure, I tapped into that 10-year-old “fun” self in 9th grade when Jenny taught me how to swear. Sure, I must have tapped into that 10-year-old fun self in high school when I seemed to be friends with everyone and was voted homecoming queen. And surely, I tapped into my “fun” self in college with all that partying those first couple of years. But there’s more fun to be had, a different sort of fun, the kind of fun God designed me for that’s barely been tapped.
Yes, this was eye opening.
I’d go so far to say that this is what ultimately brought me peace and helped me fall back asleep that night. The realization that God created me with MORE in mind, that part of that MORE might be more FUN.
Wow.
How about that?
Thank you, Ginny. I do believe God spoke truth through you that I really needed to hear for some reason.
So I’ve been wondering how this works for you, friends.
What part of you have you been holding back? What are the unknown, unexplored parts of you? Are there facets to your personality that you’ve never acknowledged, never embraced? What have you hidden from the world? What is it for you?
Perhaps you’re more adventurous than you know.
Perhaps you have an edgy side you’ve never explored.
Perhaps you need to let loose.
Perhaps you’re far more confident than you’ve let on.
Perhaps you need to initiate and believe you can do any and all things through Christ who strengthens you.
Perhaps you really ARE gracious and hospitable.
Perhaps your spirit is dying to be free.
Perhaps “just okay” is good enough.
Perhaps you don’t know and understand everything. Perhaps you don’t need to know and understand everything.
Perhaps you’re much more sensitive and tender-hearted than you’ve ever allowed yourself to be.
Perhaps you’re a dancer, a painter, a teacher, a counselor, a lover, a high flier, a farmer at heart. And you don’t even know it.
Perhaps you’re living large and you’re meant to live small.
Perhaps you’ve been living small and you’re meant to live large.
Perhaps you’ve pressed and pushed down half your real self your whole life long.
Is there anyone in the house for that?
I do believe there is.
Perhaps you know yourself oh so very well, but there’s a teeny tiny part of yourself waiting, longing to be expressed. What is that? Where is that? Why is that?
Ask yourself today.
Think about it.
Maybe you’re fun.
Maybe I’m fun.
Or maybe, just maybe, it’s something else for you.
What’s the last word you’d use to describe yourself? Does something come to mind? Perhaps, just maybe, God put a little bit of that in you, too.
It felt as if every passion, every desire, every love, vision and dream had been stripped from my soul and I was being asked to face all the truths of reality.
It was brutally quieting and humbling.
Yes, one month ago, I sat meek and mild, hunched over in the middle of our laundry room with huge piles of clean and dirty clothes all around me. I folded the mess and spoke my deepest, most intimate needs through tears as my husband passed on his way out to another 12-year-old baseball game.
“I just really need someone to root for me,” I said, among other significant truths.
This wasn’t a husband vs. wife fight. This wasn’t a me against the world fight. This wasn’t a pity party. This was a spiritual battle, a kingdom battle of eternity vs. reality. An asking all the big life questions kind of moment. An asking what’s the purpose of my life kind of moment, and who’s really, truly in this with me kind of moment.
After all…
“Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” Ephesians 6:12
I needed to know someone was rooting for me.
I needed to know someone was by my side no matter what.
I needed to know that someone really understood what was going on in my life, in my heart, in my mind, in my soul.
I needed to know that someone completely and wholeheartedly understood and embraced my dreams and visions, even if they’re a little or a lot crazy.
I needed to know someone had my back.
I needed to know that someone was following my story, that someone cared for every detail, that someone was willing to sit down and hear me all out.
I needed someone to believe in me.
I needed someone who understood my most authentic intentions.
I needed a real, live breathing body willing to take time to really get to know me, say “you go girl,” and be all in with me and for me.
I needed more than surface things.
I needed someone who was willing to go far beneath the surface to things that really mattered.
I needed to feel known, tended, and supported for who I was, for who I am.
We’re free and brave in the USA. We love our independence, our autonomy. We’re busy, we’re bound and determined to make a whole lot of things happen to achieve the American Dream in our own little corner of this great land.
But I’m concerned.
I’m concerned we’re far too busy, far too independent, far too bound and determined.
Many of us are missing out on real, deep, authentic connection.
I’ve been told a few times that I’d never share things in “real life” that I share here on the blog.
It’s true.
Or maybe not…
In some cases, I share way more on the blog than people think I should, way more than others would, way more than makes people comfortable.
Do you know why that is?
Because our lives are SO crazy busy that there’s no real place for sitting with someone for hours and learning where they are, who they are, what their greatest dreams and insecurities are on any given day. How many people do you REALLY know? I’m just asking, because generally speaking, I think we’re far too busy to give one another the real time of day.
I’m so over “How are you?” “Good.” “How are you?” “Fine.” I don’t even want to ask or answer anymore.
If you want to know the real me, we honestly need at least a couple hours together in good hearty conversation, maybe three, four or more (without kids). Who has that kind of time these days?
So I share here for those who are willing to listen, for those who are willing to join in the conversation. Real, authentic conversation. Deep, meaningful, sometimes dark conversation. Faith, fun and adventures, dreams and visions, living and loving through the hard and easy stuff, too.
I don’t know about you, but right now, I don’t have a place for the connection and depth I need as a human being. Real, long-lasting community is hard to come by these days.
Our busy culture concerns me.
We’re missing out on connection and authenticity.
People need to be known.
People need to be understood.
People desire these things deep in their souls.
So often, we’re just passing by hurting, needy souls and don’t even know it.
I’m weary of living on the easy, breezy surface.
“Be the change you wish to see in the world.” Gandhi
“So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you…” Matthew 7:12
This morning I woke up with fresh perspective.
I must be the change I wish to see in the world.
I must do for others what I would love to have done for me.
I need to be way more intentional about learning people, knowing people, speaking life to them, understanding them right where they are.
I need to be way more intentional about hearing people, understanding them, believing in all of who they are.
I am going to ROOT for the special group of people God puts in my path every day.
Because somebody needs encouragement. Somebody needs to know they’ve been heard. Somebody needs to know they’re doing okay. Somebody needs to know they’re on the right track. Somebody needs to know they’re known.
This isn’t so much about helping people as it is about knowing people.
This isn’t a “rah rah sis boom bah” kind of rooting. This is a quiet rooting, a listening, hearing, embracing and wholly understanding another human being right where they are, right where God’s growing them and leading them.
I’m outside wiping down the siding, railings, window sills and window boxes in our front porch. They’re full of dried up bugs and leaves from fall, crusty things, gross disgusting dirty things, caked on muddy things from barn swallows who attempted to nest on our front door. I want to wash it all away. I want to make it clean. I want to make all things new. For Ginny. For our guests. For my husband. For me. Make us new, Heavenly Father.
It feels good to wash and wipe surfaces. But it’s all surface, isn’t it? All this cleaning, all this preparing? This house show isn’t about that. Because we’ll never be clean, we’ll never be wholly pure, we’ll never be whole on earth.
So I stop.
The realization washes over me at the window box filled with coral geraniums and tiny, but sturdy multi-colored flowers I discovered at our nursery’s mid-season sale.
The only thing she’ll see is my heart.
There’s grace in that realization.
Freedom.
Freedom to be me. Fully me.
The only thing she’ll see is my heart.
God’s preparing this moment, this concert, to help me see that life’s not about appearances. It’s about my heart. Where is your heart? Where is your soul? Where do you stand today? Are you all about appearances and making things look clean and sparkly on the surface, or are you working in deeper, hidden places?
I stop and create. These words, they fill me. These words, they nourish my soul. My fingers fly like the wind. Because I was created to express God’s beauty, God’s truth, God’s wisdom.
Today, as I clean and make all things new on my front porch, I know one truth for sure.
The only thing Ginny will see is my heart.
The only thing God sees is my heart.
And the only thing people really need to see when they come to our house for that concert – is faith, hope, love and the sweet Spirit who will meet them here. Right where they are. Clean and unclean. Tended and untended. Always loved. As is.
When we first met at my husband’s fraternity house in August 1994, I remember thinking he was the most handsome guy I’d ever met in my life. I’m not kidding. I remember it vividly.
My roommate and I were college freshmen. It was our first week at school. Classes hadn’t started yet and we had nothing to do. So we decided to walk fraternity row. Both small town girls, we browsed the place like it was a candy shop. House after house, delight after delight lined the long campus.
We were just taking a walk.
My husband likes to debate that fact. He claims we were trolling for guys.
I’ve always denied the trolling. But perhaps it was true just a little bit?
After all, our first meeting by the sand volleyball court outside Delta Tau Delta that day marked the beginning of a 2 1/2 year period of the most extreme extroversion I’ve experienced in my entire life.
I studied hard those years. Enough to land a 3.92 GPA in the end.
But I also lived wild and free.
Gregarious.
Extroverted.
Unhindered.
Fun.
Playful.
A par.ti.er.
I drank beer. Lots of it.
I stayed up late. Really late.
I hung with my boyfriend (now husband) and his brothers at the fraternity house ALL THE TIME. So much so that four gregarious girlfriends and I were unofficially coined “Delt Girls.” So much so that I was officially named the fraternity’s “Sweetheart” two years in.
I socialized like a maniac, danced like a mad woman, took plenty of jello shots, dressed in the most ridiculous party costumes, and did things my children don’t ever need to do.
Yes, I was unstoppable.
And that was just the fun, partying, social side of me. I’m pretty sure I was a go-getter all the way around those first 2 1/2 years of college.
I was on my way to a big, bold life. Nobody could stop me. Everything was grand. I was wild and free, smart and vivacious, witty and kind. I was the girl everyone could love. The girl people could laugh at and laugh with. Words flowed free in dorm rooms, cafeterias, classrooms, libraries, fraternity houses, dances, and hockey games. I wasn’t afraid. I wasn’t doubtful. I had a handful of really close friends, a lot of good friends and a TON of great acquaintances. Guys and gals liked me, and I’m 99% confident that most people (including myself) would have described me as “fun.”
I liked my new vibrant self. She was good. She was free. She was living more boldly than ever before. She was going places, that’s for sure. Yes, there was never a doubt, never a dull moment. She was going to graduate, go to grad school, get a great job as a speech therapist and live a marvelous life. She was going to be a professional, and a respected one at that. She was going to be a mom, and a good one at that. She was going to be a church-goer, too, and a faithful one at that. She was going to be wife, and an awesome one at that.
Yes, that was me the first 2 1/2 years of college. That was me the first 1 1/2 years I dated my husband. That was me most days leading up to our engagement.
But this story’s about to turn serious.
Nearly 21 years have passed since we first met at my husband’s fraternity house.
More than 20 years have passed since we started dating.
18 1/2 years have passed since we got engaged.
And today marks our 17th wedding anniversary. Congrats, babes. I love you so much. The story God is writing through our marriage is important, noteworthy, blessed and delightful. I am honored to call you husband and do life together, easier days and hard days alike. For better, for worse.
But 17 years into marriage, there’s one fear, one insecurity that’s plagued me this year more than any other.
I fear I’m not the extroverted woman my husband dated.
I fear I’m not the gregarious woman my husband became engaged to.
I fear that the woman my husband chose to propose to is NOT AT ALL the woman he’s married to 17 years later.
And as hard as it is to admit this…
I fear he’d marry “that girl” all over again, but wouldn’t necessarily marry “this girl” all over again.
Sigh…
Exhale.
The truth is, I was the MOST extroverted I’ve ever been in my entire life when we were dating. That extroversion was limited to a short window, a short burst of time. If I look over the course of my life, I know for a fact that my extreme extroversion during our dating years was an anomaly, really. And that fact scares me sometimes.
I am NOT the same woman my husband proposed to 18 1/2 years ago. I am not the same woman my husband married 17 years ago.
I’m back to my fully introverted self now.
I don’t drink beer. At all. In fact, I hate it.
I don’t party with the boys. Ever. (Although I still think men are way more chill than women.)
I don’t dance like a mad woman and I don’t do jello shots except the one time my sweet neighbor forced me to on a hot play day in her front yard. I don’t stay up really late unless I’m blogging, I’m not a social maniac at all, and I’d never use the word “fun” to describe myself anymore.
Did my husband, a dolphin, know he was marrying a wolf 17 years ago? Or did my extremely extroverted dating behavior lead him to believe he was marrying a dolphin?
Okay. I know this is getting a little out there for some of you. (Yes, real live people have assigned animals to each of the 16 Meyers-Briggs personality types so I’m not making this stuff up.) But hear me out.
17 years in, I’m starting to believe that real life CHANGE is quite possibly the greatest threat to marriage.
What happens when our spouse changes?
What happens when we change?
What happens when we barely resemble the people who stood on the altar and said “I do?”
What then?
Do we give up on marriage?
Do we trash it?
Ditch it?
Give up?
Give in?
Say forget about this, I’m out, this isn’t working anymore, let’s get a divorce?
How do we respond to change in marriage?
What happens when your spouse gains 20 pounds, 30 pounds, 40 pounds, 150 pounds?
What happens when your spouse loses 30 pounds, is suddenly obsessed with their weight and you aren’t so much at all?
What happens when kids rock your world?
What happens when you can’t get pregnant like you thought you could?
What happens when the adoption falls through? Or when she wants to do foster care and you don’t?
What happens when your spouse starts working long, late nights to get that promotion and you’re home alone with the kids day after day after day?
What happens when you have an empty nest?
What happens when one of you goes back to school?
What happens when you have significant financial setbacks?
What happens when your spouse makes a major career change?
What happens when one of you wants to lounge around in retirement and the other wants to volunteer, travel, work, and be with the grandkids all the time?
What happens when your spouse grows lots of nose hairs and chin hairs?
What happens when your spouse goes bald?
What happens when your spouse lies in bed all day depressed and withdrawn?
What happens when your kids go off the rails?
What happens when one of your children has a disability?
What happens when one of your children passes away?
What happens when your spouse’s faith is solid and yours has fizzled?
What happens when your spouse receives a cancer diagnosis?
What happens when your spouse is debilitated by dementia, Alzheimers, Parkinsons?
What happens when your spouse is confined to a wheelchair?
What happens when your spouse requires oxygen tanks to survive?
What happens when your spouse needs help going to the bathroom?
How will you respond? How will we respond?
Change in marriage is inevitable.
What makes or breaks our marriages is how we respond to change.
If you’re married long enough, there will come a time when you’ll realize you are NOT the same person you were when you got married. We are humans. We change. We evolve. We grow and develop over time. We become more of who we really are.
As I’ve been working through this fear, this fear that I’m not the same woman my husband married 17 years ago, this fear that he’d marry “that girl” but not “this girl,” I’ve decided that marriage requires an equal parts accepting, surrendering, fighting, trusting and believing.
Accept that you have changed.
Accept that your spouse has changed.
Surrender to your current reality.
Surrender to the ebb and flow.
Fight for your marriage. Fight to the ends of the earth. Until you can fight no more.
Trust it’s the right thing to do.
Believe you are worthy.
Believe your spouse is worthy.
Believe God brought you together for a reason.
Believe God has a plan for your marriage.
Believe you can make it.
Believe marriage is worth it.
Believe he’d marry you all over again.
Believe she’d marry you all over again.
Believe that “this girl” is just as lovely and beautiful, treasured and true as “that girl.”
Believe that “this guy” is just as handsome and witty, sporty and smart as “that guy.”
Believe you can do this.
Believe you are loved.
Believe that change is not only real, but okay.
Believe that long-lasting love is forged through change, challenges and the hardest stuff life has to offer.
Believe in 40th, 50th, and 60th wedding anniversaries.
Believe in wrinkly hand holding.
In the car ride on the way home from church, he played her “Good Stuff,” his favorite B52s song from days gone by. Days prior, she’d played him “Through All of It,” her favorite new song on Christian radio, the song she can’t stop listening to, the song that resonates with her soul most right now.
A dolphin song. A wolf song.
Somewhere along the way, they met in the middle with a frog and pig song. The Rainbow Connection resonated with both.
Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy. A frog and a pig.
Seth and Amy. A dolphin and a wolf.
Who knew.
They live. They laugh. They fight. They change. They come together, still. They come together, again. Time and time again. For love. Sweet love.
A radio program on Moody (Truth for Life) has had an excellent sermon series you would enjoy. It’s by Alistair Begg and it’s called “We Two Are One”. It’s a 12 part sermon that’s actually broken into several 2 & 4 part sermons. All speak toward marriage – our commitment, changes that come in marriage, protecting your marriage, and so on. I’ve listened to the podcasts and they have been excellent!!
This is GOOD, no exceptionally GREAT!! Your dad and I think it’s one of your BEST!! You’ve got marriage covered by every angle. Thank you for being so real! Many more Hsppy Happy years to you and Seth!!! Love you!! ❤️
Beautiful and insightful Amy! Happy Anniversary to you and Seth! You are right on about “how we make or break marriage is how we respond to change.” May you continue to blessed on your journey together!
Wow! Just wow! So incredibly insightful and beautiful! I think you expressed what many of us have thought but could never put into words so eloquently.
Amy!! This post is awesome! It has made me really think about my own life and how I’ve changed too or did I just change for those few years and am back to the regular me?!
Great things to ponder!
Thanks for being so open.
A radio program on Moody (Truth for Life) has had an excellent sermon series you would enjoy. It’s by Alistair Begg and it’s called “We Two Are One”. It’s a 12 part sermon that’s actually broken into several 2 & 4 part sermons. All speak toward marriage – our commitment, changes that come in marriage, protecting your marriage, and so on. I’ve listened to the podcasts and they have been excellent!!
Congrats on the 17 years 🙂
Oops!!! I mean HAPPY!!!
This is GOOD, no exceptionally GREAT!! Your dad and I think it’s one of your BEST!! You’ve got marriage covered by every angle. Thank you for being so real! Many more Hsppy Happy years to you and Seth!!! Love you!! ❤️
Thanks, Amy! And Happy Anniversary to you and Seth. Keep on singing the songs of your hearts.
Beautiful and insightful Amy! Happy Anniversary to you and Seth! You are right on about “how we make or break marriage is how we respond to change.” May you continue to blessed on your journey together!
Thank you very much for your kind words, Kelly!
Incredible post, Amy! Inspirational! Seth is a blessed man to have you and I’m sure he would marry you all over again!!
Beautiful post, babe…. Except that I’m the pig in your frog/pig metaphor. 😉
Wow! Just wow! So incredibly insightful and beautiful! I think you expressed what many of us have thought but could never put into words so eloquently.
This is HEARTFELT BEAUTIFUL! And I am awaiting your hubby’s view as well as saving this for our 44th anniversary in 2 months!
You know you need to give us Seth’s opinion on this, right?!! This is a great post, Amy. God is good through all the changes…
Excellent post Amy! Faith Hope and Love… and the greatest of these IS love! Blessings Abound!
Amy!! This post is awesome! It has made me really think about my own life and how I’ve changed too or did I just change for those few years and am back to the regular me?!
Great things to ponder!
Thanks for being so open.
You’re welcome, Raquel. And thank you for your kind words! Glad the post resonated with you and made you reflect on your own life and marriage.