Friday, June 6, 2025

Doctoral Residency, Part 1

 Hey, friends and fam!  Just finished a lovely campus walk, and I'm writing from Lakewood, Colorado tonight!  

This = yesterday morning after our first session, me with Dr. Ryan Burkhart and Dr. Selin Philip, my two favorite professors at CCU -- I could and would so happily listen to them talk all day!

I enjoyed the 10-hour drive on my own, just listening to music and audiobooks and chatting with Mom and Chet Lee!

Despite a poor night's sleep and the weather being a bit dreary and rainy this time, I'm especially grateful for the presence of God, the support and wisdom of the CCU faculty, and the growing sense of community and belonging!

Me and Alicia (love her - she did her Masters at Dallas Theological Seminary and she's super fun and we've had some great talks here) headed to grab some coffee (for her) before our last first day of school!! 

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My team won the Haiku challenge, a silly team-building project, but still fun to be in the winning group! =)

PhD pen - YAY! lol

The girls after our dinner at Farmhouse Thai Eatery last night... Alicia, Terri, Laura, me, Charisse, Heather, and Michelle!  Terri lives close to campus, but the rest of us are roommates! =)

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All our classes have been in the new chapel building, the Armstrong Center! ❤

The above pic and the below cutest-bunny-buttons pics are from my campus walk tonight.  The CCU bunnies are friendly and unafraid, and I love it! =)

My annual selfie by the CCU lake and fountain! =)

The Rock Woodfired Pizza for dinner with most of the doctoral cohort tonight!

Over 80 people applied, 18 were admitted, and 17 are in our current group!  This = Me, Laura, Heather, Billy, Jasmine, Alicia, Charisse, Kacie, Terri, and Elyse!

Dr. Philip teaching on Biblical Foundations was everything I could hope for - she has so much wisdom, and you can just tell she knows Jesus well!

Anyway, I'm headed to bed because I'm getting up for an early breakfast meeting tomorrow!  The first two days here have been great, and I expect nothing less from the next two!  I've had some good time to process and pray and think about the life and identity God is calling me into.  I'll write a more detailed recap on Monday!  Best of luck to Chet Lee and Mark Anthony in the Tulsa Tough bike race tomorrow morning... and Happy belated 1st Birthday to Miss Holly Marie yesterday!
❤ ❤ ❤

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Alpha and Omega

"How do You never change, yet new every morning?
King of the world, y
et lowly in heart.
There 'til the end; You're there from the start.
You are the Lion and the Lamb, both God and man.
Lord and You're my friend, Jesus.

Alpha and Omega, beginning and end.
Everlasting Father, my Lord and Friend!"
~CeCe Winans, Lord and Friend

They officially shared yesterday what we've suspected over the past week - my friend, Kristen Harris, is in her final days on earth after a 10-month battle with leukemia. 

Here's a yesteryear pic of us at the Hillsong conference. ❤

Kristen and her Mom (Brenda), the girls on her birthday, and the Mend fundraising dinner in 2020.

Kristin and her Dad (Bill) on Father's Day last June... she posted around this time last year about having symptoms that wouldn't go away and praying for answers as to what was causing them.

She and her family have had a grueling 10 months since her initial diagnosis, most of that spent at MD Anderson in Houston, chemo treatments and bone marrow biopsies and fighting infections and pneumonia, always doing their best to speak life and hope through it all.  Kristen is my age and single -- I'm emotional about it all, and I want her to know her life mattered.  She and her family have been a light in the midst of a dark and heavy season, and I'm grateful they're back in Oklahoma and that people are able to potentially visit and to comment with love and memories and support during her final days here.

Song of the Week = Alpha and Omega by the Gaither Vocal Band
Dad loves the Gaithers, so I heard them a lot growing up, and this was one of the few songs I really enjoyed.  The CeCe Winans song at the top of this post reminded me of it, so I looked it up this week.  It has a more powerful beginning than I'd remembered, and a joyful ending that all feels appropriate for this post.

1 Peter 1

Dear Friends, God the Father knew you and chose you long ago, and His Spirit has made you holy.  As a result, you have obeyed Him and have been cleansed by the blood of Jesus Christ.  May God bless you richly and grant you increasing freedom from all anxiety and fear.

Praise to God for a Living Hope

All praise to God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In His great mercy, He has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.  Now we live in the hope of eternal life because Christ rose again from the dead, and God has reserved for His children the priceless gift of eternal life.  It is kept in Heaven for you, pure and undefiled, beyond the reach of change and decay.  And through your faith, God is protecting you by His power until you receive this salvation, which is ready to be revealed on the last day for all to see.

So be truly glad.  There is wonderful joy ahead, even though you must endure many trials for a little while.  These trials will show that your faith is genuine.  It is being tested as fire tests and purifies gold—though your faith is far more precious than mere gold.  So when your faith remains strong through many trials, it will bring you much praise and glory and honor on the day when Jesus Christ is revealed to the whole world.

You love Him even though you have never seen Him.  Though you do not see Him now, you trust Him; and you rejoice with a glorious, inexpressible joy.  The reward for trusting Him will be the salvation of your souls…

A Call to Holy Living

Therefore, with minds that are alert and fully sober, set your hope on the grace to be brought to you when Jesus Christ is revealed at His coming.  As obedient children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance.  But now you must be holy in everything you do, just as God who chose you is holy.  He himself has said, “You must be holy, for I am holy.”

And remember that the heavenly Father to whom you pray has no favorites.  He will judge or reward you according to what you do.  So you must live in reverent fear of Him during your time here as “temporary residents.”  God paid a ransom to save you from the impossible road to heaven which your fathers tried to take, and the ransom He paid was not mere gold or silver, which lose their value.  But He paid for you with the precious lifeblood of Christ, the sinless, spotless Lamb of God.  God chose Him as your ransom long before the world began, but now in these last days He has been revealed for your sake.

Because of this, your trust can be in God who raised Christ from the dead and gave Him great glory.  Now your faith and hope can rest in Him alone.

You were cleansed from your sins when you obeyed the truth, so now you must show sincere love to each other as brothers and sisters. Love each other deeply with all your heart.  For you have a new life… Yes, our natural lives will fade as grass does when it becomes all brown and dry.  All our greatness is like a flower that droops and falls; but the Word of the Lord will last forever.  And His message is the Good News that was preached to you.”

❤ ❤ ❤

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Life Lately...

Okay, lighter post this time! =)

Kristin and the boys joined me for lunch at McAlister's on Thursday!! ❤


Frankie and Diesel were at their Cross Timbers church camp, so it was just her and Wesson and Nash!


They were surprised and happy to see me, so that was fun!!  Nash's missing-teeth smile and joking with his mom to stay out of trouble makes me happy! lol

We ran into Christina Maynes, formerly Tina Barlow, the star volleyball player for the 2000 CHA team! =) She was always kind to me, and it was good to see her!  She played on a scholarship for four years at OU and is now the head VB coach for CCS.  Mom and Rach were ready to switch schools when I told them that. lol

Then Jaceman and I went to see Karate Kid: Legends that night.  We were both equally thrilled with this last-minute cameo! lol  "Miyagi-Dough:  Slice first, slice hard, no anchovies!"

I had a hair appointment on Saturday, after Chipotle lunch with the wonderful Wilson fam!  (Tate and Parker were out back playing when I took this pic, but they ran out to hug me as I was in the process of driving off! lol)

So many cute bunnies in and around their yard... they're apparently eating the lovely flowers Chettles planted, so I don't approve of that, but still love seeing them! lol 

Thanks to my counseling homework project, I signed up for info on Thursday and ended up trying out a new Moore Lifegroup this morning...... imagine my surprise when the leader texted me her address a few houses down ON MY STREET! lol  God is funny sometimes!!  There were only three of us there for this first meeting, but we had a really good talk, and I'm excited about finally knowing one of my neighbors!  We're meeting every other Saturday, starting with the Captivating study then moving on to Lysa TerKeurst, so yay for all of that!  And yay for the pink backsplash and green cabinets in her Taber home! =)
It was Katie's very first time leading/hosting and Devon's first time attending any group.  I've done both more times than I can count, but it's been a while, and it was really nice to connect with them today!

So thankful it's not all up to me - God is guiding my steps and showing me which path to take. 

Adore them - so happy to have them back on a monthly basis now!

New rosy check vase with pink flowers and polka dot bow from Mom - love it! ❤

Happy last day of May, friends and fam!!  Reassessing wellness goals post-Marathon, and my June/July goals are to open a physical Bible and read one chapter a day + include a serving of veggies every day (spinach blended into a protein shake totally counts) + reach 175 by July 31st + complete a 5k (3.1 miles) every day of June and July (can be walking or running, all at once or in 2-3 segments).  

Let's make it a great summer ahead!!
❤ ❤ ❤

Pure and Blameless

In my latest audiobook, Annie B. Jones mentioned a term that I’d never heard before: scrupulosity.  It's a lesser-known subtype of OCD marked by obsessive concern with moral or religious perfection — feeling a distorted sense of guilt and a fear of offending God, even over smaller things.

I’m not sure I fully qualify for that label, but I definitely experienced something similar as a child.  My natural perfectionism combined with the legalistic culture of the school and church environments I was in led to a heavy burden of guilt and a strict understanding of God.  I often felt disproportionately convicted about minor things in kid-friendly movies or TV shows while everyone around me seemed totally fine with them.  My desire to fit in led me to regularly rationalize that as long as something wasn’t overtly evil (ie some horror movies) or clearly hurtful to someone else, then maybe God was okay with it, especially if other Christians were on board.

Looking back, that was twisted logic and a good example of why Scripture warns us not to lean on our limited understanding.  That kind of self-guided reasoning can easily lead us down a slippery slope where minor compromises open the door to bigger ones.

As a young adult, in trying to avoid legalism, I did what many of us do and swung too far in the other direction.  I embraced “grace” in places where God was likely calling for conviction.  That pendulum swing is calming down, and I am working my way back to a more balanced, Biblically-grounded middle.  But knowing exactly where to draw the line has proven verrry challenging, especially with entertainment (books, movies, TV shows, podcasts, etc.).

The pull of worldly culture is strong, and it is constant.  I hear Christians justify things all the time, and I wrestle with comparison—wondering if I’m being too sensitive or not gracious enough.  Then I remember what Jesus told Peter when he asked about John: “What is that to you? You follow Me.” And that’s what I keep coming back to.  I'm not responsible for what others justify—I’m fully responsible for my obedience in my own walk with God.

Still, because of that early scrupulosity, I don’t always trust my inner convictions.  It’s like I’ve never had a totally clear conscience because that standard always felt so unattainable... so I learned to justify some small things… and then bigger things.  And now I’m trying to untangle that whole web and discern what is genuine conviction from the Holy Spirit versus what’s leftover fear or religious dogma.

A messy but worthwhile process.

This verse caught my attention recently - the idea of “living a pure and blameless life until the day of Christ’s return” sounds beautiful on the surface.  But to me, it also feels impossible.  Maybe I'm misunderstanding what “pure and blameless” actually means?  To me, it sounds like never having a lustful thought, speaking a curse word, gossiping, overeating, complaining, or feeling jealous.  "Go and. sin. no. more," as Jesus Himself told the woman He rescued after being caught in adultery.  If Christ-level perfection is the bar, I am sure not meeting it.  And God's Word is pretty clear that there will be a massive crowd of people who deceive themselves into believing they’re saved when they are not...

Most churches in America tend to emphasize the importance of faith - trusting Jesus to save us "by grace through faith, not of works, lest any man should boast."  I get that.  But our obedience and sanctification matter, too, and many Christians discount that.  “Just as He who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do.”  I have to study this out and seek God here because sometimes I feel sincere confusion around all of this.

So I’m praying for wisdom and clarity.  I want to grow in knowing Jesus, in my love and knowledge and understanding of "what really matters" to God.  Righteousness isn’t measured by comparison or by what we’ve avoided, and sometimes the vices that are easier to hide can actually be more dangerous, so confession and repentance are vital!

Sometimes I still question whether I’ve offended God in some irreparable way... and I know that sounds irrational, but the rejection I've endured from people who once loved me makes it much easier to misinterpret certain verses and project that fear onto God when He feels distant or quiet.

Nothing is hidden from God - He knows our hearts, our thoughts, and everything we watch, read, and consume.  The idea of never making another poor/sinful choice feels like an unbearable pressure when I look at the big picture of my whole future, and something in my flesh pushes back against it pretty hard and assumes that can't possibly be the standard.  But I'm starting to think that's an agreement I've made that I need to pray through and break now - there's a verse in Deuteronomy where God tells His people that His command to love Him and walk in His ways "is not too difficult for you or beyond your reach."  So I'm going to work on being more submissive and surrendered in my own heart - not making lazy excuses or assumptions that I'm incapable, but doing my best -- one day at a time -- to love God well and walk in step with the Holy Spirit and quickly confess and repent when I mess up.  Not legalism, not license, but choosing love that leads to real surrender.  My heart's desire is to be pure and blameless before God… and I know the love and the blood of Jesus cover a multitude of sins for all of us... but I feel like I’m still figuring out what it means to "work out my salvation" -- how that actually plays out in this modern world and in my specific life.  What shows and movies etc. need to go?  What parts of my current identity or way of relating need to be sacrificed to pursue that kind of all-in obedience, and am I willing to break old agreements and let go of things that feel incredibly comfortable and humble myself and do whatever it takes?  I sincerely hope so!

Paul says everything else is rubbish compared to knowing Christ, and I want to live that out and believe it more deeply in the core of my being.  The sin lines feel blurry for me, and I need God to help me reset my conscience to hear His conviction more clearly, without being excessive or overcomplicating it all by fixating on things that are not truly sin.  We all have to discern between the enemy speaking shame/condemnation (which destroys) vs. God's conviction (which transforms).  And I need to believe with confidence that God is kind and forgiving and still loves me deeply, that He is worthy of my total surrender, and that nothing I ever give up here compares to the eternal reward He offers.  He is not taking things away without offering something in return.  He has good gifts and wants good things for us: abundant life, strong relationships, and a future that reflects His character and goodness! ❤


Okay then, good talk. lol  (If any of this resonates, I would welcome honest conversations and would definitely appreciate your prayers as I keep sifting through it all with God.)

Much lighter post coming next! ❤️

"The Lord Will Make Your Paths Straight"

I had a brief conversation with Mr. Smith in the CHA gym lobby after Abby's graduation...  he asked when I was moving back to Tulsa.  Several people saw that announcement video but totally missed the follow-up. lol  I told him that was still my hope at some point, but I wasn't really sure when it would happen.  Without knowing any of the factors playing into my decision, he thought about it for a minute and said (with what I knew to be sincere care): "Well, the Lord will make your paths straight."

I loved that.
It caught me off guard in a good way.

This = Ken and Cheryl, Megan Elizabeth's wonderful parents.
He was also a CHA teacher, so I still call him Mr. Smith.

I Googled that verse, not realizing it was Proverbs 3:5-6.  I've thought about it a lot since.  The translation I'm much more familiar with says: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding.  Seek His will in all you do, and He will show you which path to take."  That was the Bible App verse of the day on Wednesday, and the header verse posted on CCU's page when I signed into my new classes for the first time this week... not an accident or coincidence.  

True to Enneagram 9 form, I have been questioning things and looking at it from all sides, wrestling with whether to move forward in pursuing the doctorate vs. whether the cost is too high (financial, emotional, relational, etc.).  And true to His own faithfulness, God has been giving me little nudges of confirmation and clarity.  In my counseling session on Thursday, Emily asked what I felt when I thought about going forward with the program, and I immediately said, "pressure."  I feel confident that God heard that and sent this verse as a timely reminder for me yesterday.

Dr. Philip is the head of CCU's doctoral program and one of the most solid, Godly women I have encountered.  We each write a "Get to Know You" post before residency, and this was part of hers...

Hi new CES students,

I’m Dr. Philip, and I am so grateful to be with you at the beginning of something both beautiful and significant.  [She shared part of her story and family life here]...

Regardless of the roles the Lord calls me to, I’m simply a woman learning to say 'yes' to whatever He places before me, even when it looks nothing like what I ever imagined... I care deeply about spiritual transformation - not the polished kind, but the kind that happens when Jesus meets us in our weakness and says, “I am not done with you yet" and we surrender to His will.

I want to keep walking in the direction of purpose, and for me, that purpose is Jesus Himself. He is not just the one who gives us the reward. He is the reward. I delight in Him.  I want to help raise up counselors who do not just know the textbook, but who know the Healer. I want to help form leaders in the counseling field who do not just profess knowledge, but live it. And I want to be faithful where my feet are, trusting that God wastes nothing, not our pain, not our passion, not our past.

I am so excited to hear your stories and to walk alongside you in this first step of your doctoral journey. I pray you feel a sense of belonging here. God is up to something good.

With joy,

Dr. Philip

So good!  I loved what she said about this being the beginning of something beautiful and significant, and learning to say yes to whatever God places before her even when life doesn't look like she'd imagined.  Love the part about knowing the Healer, not just the textbook, and the timely reminder that Jesus is our reward, and God wastes nothing (that's been another concern for me recently - that if I don't finish the program, it would've been wasted effort - not true).  Finally, her parting words reminded me that I do feel a sense of belonging at CCU, and I do believe God is up to something good, soooo YAY!


Whew... the last five months have been tiring and hard on my sense of calling and identity as a counselor.  Satan meant for them to be.  I wrote an email asking about deferring the program yesterday morning, then I've prayed and read a lot and had some important conversations since then.  I am grateful to Emily and to Chet Lee for asking good questions and reminding me of important truths and helping me sift through my current grief and overwhelm to process this big decision, and I'm grateful to Mr. Smith for the reminder that the Lord will make my paths straight and show me which path to take.  For now, that looks like giving my best effort here - not reluctantly or in response to pressure, but cheerfully and with sincere gratitude for God opening this door, surrendering and saying yes to what He has placed before me, even when it looks nothing like the life I once imagined.  Looking forward to my sixth trip to Colorado next week to start this program - get excited!


Whatever decisions you may be facing today,
trust in God and seek His will,
and He will show you which path to take!

❤ ❤ ❤

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Reading Recap

 

1.  What Does It Feel Like?  by Sophie Kinsella -- Recap HERE.

2.  Don't Look Back: Getting Unstuck and Moving Forward with Passion and Purpose by Christine Caine -- Reread this two years later - Christine is encouraging and motivating!  Original recap HERE.

3.  Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves by Allison Wood Brooks 

I enjoyed this one!  In this book, T-A-L-K is an acronym for Topics, Asking, Levity, and Kindness... aka coming in prepared with ideas when you're meeting new people, being genuinely curious and asking good questions about their lives, bringing light and laughter into your conversations, and treating people the way they want to be treated.  I learned about this author through the Mel Robbins podcast -- she's a Harvard professor with some great insights for building better communication skills, and her tips for job interviews were timely and helpful just before my MCC interviews!

4.  My Next Breath by Jeremy Renner

This is Jeremy's story of surviving and thriving after being crushed by a Snowcat (38 broken bones) on New Years Day 2023 -- I sincerely applaud his resilience, grit, stubborn strength, and holding onto hope.  They included the audio from the actual 911 call made by his neighbor where you hear him groaning in pain and his nephew explaining things in the background.  Rough.  He talks about going to Lamaze classes with his pregnant mom as a young boy, and practicing those breathing techniques as he was alone on the ice waiting for paramedics to arrive - he refused to let himself fall asleep or lose consciousness in that critical period.  I found myself repeatedly thinking how I want him to know Jesus - he refers to certain things as coincidences or twists of fate that were so clearly God's protection.  Grateful he shared his inspiring story; praying for his eyes and heart to be open to gospel truth.

5.  Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling

After all this time!?  Always.  Sooooo gooood.  Not even sure how many times I've read these at this point, but I know this won't be the last.  The life lessons and the redemptive arc are so strong in this final book - so much loss and sacrifice, but also a great deal of restoration and high purpose and hope.  The hallows and the horcruxes - I marvel at J.K.'s ability to weave this whole story together.  My love for the characters is real, and the story continues on in my mind.  The thought of the Weasley and Potter family dinners brings me an absurd amount of joy - like, I literally think about them on Thanksgiving and Christmas sometimes, imagining them all together at the Burrow with their kids and the Weasley siblings and all the noise and laughter and drama and great food. lol  Of course it is happening inside my head... but why on earth should that mean that it is not real? ;-)

6.  Ordinary Time:  Lessons Learned While Staying Put by Annie B. Jones

Recommended by Mel and Sophie - loved it - a warm collection of essays and stories that made me want to continue writing my own and potentially find the recurring themes and collect them into a lovely book format. lol  

Quotes that stood out for me:
"I am no longer devastated when the church behaves in contradiction to itself.  The church is not Jesus; Jesus is Jesus.  And my expectations of Him are met every time.  My spiritual life no longer has church at its center.  Do I still believe in church?  Still attend a church?  Yes. Not everyone I love does, but I still do.  I think one of the reasons this is even conceivable is because I lowered the bar... In so much of my life, I want our institutions to do better, to behave better, to provide better.  But much like I no longer worship a particular political party, I no longer worship church.  I do not have her on a high pedestal because I see her for what she is...  Of course I want more out of church, more out of faith, but I now know perfection won't exist this side of Heaven."

"My very favorites are the ones who I can tell are having a great time, the women who aren't afraid to laugh heartily or grin giddily, the ones who take photos and express gratitude and pull staffers aside to share their awe.  The solution to an age of disenchantment?  Be enchanted.  Share about it.  In a world of cynicism, earnestness is crucial... I don't want to be known for my eyeroll, but for my awe.  Love what you love, yes.  But also, don't keep it to yourself!"

Thanks for stopping by! =)  I love you and believe in you,
and I'm confident God is with you and for you!
❤ ❤ ❤

Cap and Gown, Part 2!

Before we destroy the cap and glue it to a picture frame forevermore, we decided to take a few more photos!!  Last night was family dinner, followed by backyard photos with the fam! ❤


Sister pic!

J&K

Parrishes, minus T-man

Kyndal Faith

Jace Michael

Mom and Dad!

Just Dad (since Mom was with me for the actual ceremony)

Rach and the kids - my apologies for the terrible lighting, but the kids were in the pool by the time I realized that! lol

Rach with Mom and Dad!

Thanks to K's reminder text, I'll remember to bring my swimsuit next week.  Kyndal so wanted to try a back dive but couldn't bring herself to do it just yet.  We all cheered her on, but I understand that it's surprisingly scary to throw yourself backwards when you can't even see the water.  This = Rach trying to help spot her! =)

Jace did multiple backflips and back dives trying to inspire her, along with his "peregrine falcon dive" which is an upside-down cannonball jump. lol

Comforting Jace: "Hey, don't worry about it - I wasn't brave enough on the first day either.  Wait, actually, I was!  Nevermind.  But I didn't get it on my first jump." lolol  ...I feel sure she'll have it down in time for her birthday!

Huzzah!  Jaceman suggested this, and I'm happy we tried it!

Judge Brockman is at a conference in Florida this week.  I'm covering the phones this afternoon and tomorrow, but I have Friday off, and I'm grateful for such a light-and-breezy work week!  I'll probably see you again here later today. lol