All posts in category Faith & Hope
Permission Granted . . . To Not Have It Altogether
Posted by ardisanelson on May 16, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/05/16/permission-granted-to-not-have-it-altogether/
Preparing for Mother’s Day
Except for sending flowers and a card to my mother for Mother’s Day in years past, my Mother’s Day focus has mostly been on spending time with my immediate family—my spouse and two sons. That was until two years ago. That was the last time I saw my mother alive—Mother’s Day 2010. Since that time Mother’s Day has much more significance to me.
It is hard for me to believe that visit was two years ago. My life is radically different now, including the way I prepare for and celebrate Mother’s Day. That is because in the process of losing my mother, I was blessed with the gift of emotional and spiritual healing. As a result, I have gotten in touch with parts of my identity that I had denied and suppressed for years. I tend to think that the way I am now is similar in many ways to how my mother would’ve been had she not suffered that nervous breakdown all those years ago. I am grateful for recognizing that I AM wired like her. It is part of the legacy that she left me and makes me very grateful for her on Mother’s Day.Posted by ardisanelson on May 11, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/05/11/preparing-for-mothers-day/
Expanding My Spanish Circle of Friendship

Posted by ardisanelson on April 24, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/04/24/expanding-my-spanish-circle-of-friendship/
Building Teams For Life
Have you ever given any thought to the how’s and whys of the relationships you have around you? As we go through life we connect with people and build relationships from a variety of sources. We have blood relatives, marital ties, work relationships, school relationships, church or ministry relationships and special interest or hobby groups—to name a few. If you really take a look at the people in your relationship circles, you can start to see patterns in the people you have around you. Those patterns can help you to determine your own areas of growth and pruning in your life.
Before I got into recovery, I didn’t pay any attention to the reasons people were in my life. I just blindly went through life doing all I could to cope with each new circumstance that landed in my path. When I started to realize that I had choices about who I could be in relationship with and what those relationships would look like, it was very freeing. I had to go through a painful process of pruning some of those relationships.
One of the guiding principles I use to build new relationships is based on a definition from the book “Safe People” by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend. They define safe people as someone who:
1. Draws us closer to God.
2. Draws us closer to others.
3. Helps us become the real person God created us to be.
As I recently began to lead a group of women through a Christian 12-step program, I was again faced with looking at the relationships I have around me. While I’ve been blessed to have some amazing spiritual women mentor me and befriend me, I still needed to strengthen the team of recovery relationships I have around me. That’s because as you work through the 12 steps you need to be connected with people who have walked this path before you. You need their expertise and guidance and to offer hope as you progress through the 12 steps.
But that is not the only team I am building around me. I am taking these same principles into my career and life goals as well. For my writing, I attend monthly Christian writer’s meetings so I can meet other writers and glean from their wisdom. For my scrapbooking and photography interests, I connect with others who have a love of those hobbies. I also have a group of trusted friends who I can call on for prayer and comfort in my darker times.
Building teams for life is a very rewarding process. The harder part is discerning when to prune those relationships. But if we go through life with the philosophy that there are seasons to our lives as Ecclesiastes 3:1 says, it is much easier to make decisions to prune our relationships or to let them go at the right time.
Whether you are working on a 12-step program or just dealing with life’s every day challenges, we all need a team of people around us to support us, encourage us and mentor us. When you think about the teams of people around you, do you see gaps that need to be filled or areas to prune? What’s your next step to cultivating the relationships you need in your life to achieve your goals? What are you waiting for? Just do it!
Posted by ardisanelson on April 14, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/04/14/building-teams-for-life/
Was The Sacrifice Worth It?
Posted by ardisanelson on April 10, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/04/10/was-the-sacrifice-worth-it/
Sticks And Stones May Break My Bones
In hindsight, I can definitely see how Satan used this to throw me off course and to attempt to derail me from being on this team. Sometimes I even became my own worst enemy in the process. When I was young, kids used to say ‘sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me’. As an adult, I know that those words are not true. Words do hurt people. And in fact, quite often people intentionally do use words to hurt people. After all, hurt people hurt people. Their words can and do stick with you—if you allow it.
I have often been reminded of Ephesians 6:12 over the last few weeks. “For 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.” Then God’s still quiet voice also reminds me of his promises as in Jeremiah 29:11: “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”Posted by ardisanelson on March 26, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/03/26/sticks-and-stones-may-break-my-bones/
On Reverence
Posted by ardisanelson on February 27, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/02/27/on-reverence/
Waiting on Pins and Needles
Update 8/24/2012: My story, “Walking My Mother Home”, was released in “Journeys to Mother Love” by Cladach Publishing. Autographed copies are available on my site.
Posted by ardisanelson on February 20, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/02/20/waiting-on-pins-and-needles/
Turning Failure Into Victory
January is a month of many significant spiritual milestones for me. This year marks the 8th anniversary of my coming out of denial and realizing that I couldn’t do life on my own terms. It is the anniversary of my demotion. It is funny how easy I can say that now. At the time, I was so humiliated. I was also incredibly relieved.
I knew something had to change in my life. I was working 6-7 days a week. At one point I worked 20 days in a row trying to fix the mounting system problems that were causing so much work and stress for me and my staff. I worked long hours at my office. I worked on the bus. I worked into the early morning hours from home. I was exhausted.
When I walked into my boss’s office on that Friday afternoon, January 30, I was thrilled to have met our deadlines. I was proud of myself and the people on my team that worked so hard to overcome huge obstacles—all for the sake of accurate and timely W-2s. (Let’s just say that my employer had a history.) I was greeted with the news of my demotion.
There is a huge story behind all of this, but the point is that God used this life-changing event to transform me. He used it to point me toward Him and He used it to help me take responsibility for my decisions and behaviors that had led me down this path of self-destruction. It has been a long process. During January, I don’t even give W-2s or working in that kind of environment a second thought. There was a time that I loved it and thought it was my mission in life—that I would be lost without it. It was my idol.
As I started to work through my work addiction that first year—while still being employed, I had to set boundaries on the number of hours I worked, I had to not try to do everything and be everything for everybody. I had to learn that it was just a ‘job’—that it was just a ‘paycheck’. I had to learn that my value was not dictated by what my boss, peers or staff thought of me. I had to learn that my value was dictated by God and His unconditional love for me. That took lots of time and lots of love being poured into me from the outside—by other followers of Christ who also struggled seeing themselves as God sees them.
What is so ironic—and humorous in hindsight—is that although my boss demoted me for my lack of people skills, God has ‘promoted’ me and abundantly used me in this area. He has taken me out of my analytical walk to one of faith and obedience from my heart. Sure I am very detail oriented. I am a good organizer and highly capable of managing projects. But the area that I get the most satisfaction with is in the trenches of working through the struggles of life—of connecting one on one or in small groups with others who are hungry for spiritual growth.
That is where I give back in ministry. I love to facilitate life change. I have served in various ministry roles since my demotion. Even now I am part of a team that is launching a ministry that has been near and dear to my heart since I was demoted. It is Celebrate Recovery.
Celebrate Recovery is a biblical 12-step program based on the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:3-10). At first I attended for my compulsive work habits, but I soon came to realize that these principles were needed in all areas of my life. It was about embracing a lifestyle change that put Jesus first in my heart, mind and soul. It was about the character building that I needed to become more like Christ. Lastly, it was allowing Him to turn my failure into victory.
Eight years later, I am grateful for that experience and still sold out for Jesus. My identity is no longer wrapped up in what I do, but is now based on who I am. My identity is in Christ.
Celebrate Recovery launches at Timberlake Church in Redmond, WA on Wednesday, February 29 at 7PM. Check out CelebrateRecovery.com for a meeting in your area. Or join us, if you live locally, to help us celebrate the launch of this new ministry of hope and healing.
Posted by ardisanelson on January 31, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/01/31/turning-failure-into-victory/
White As Snow
When I sat down to blog earlier this week, I was inspired to write about the snow. Everyone in my house was in bed. I opened the front door and stepped outside on the covered porch of our house. I delighted in the glistening sight of snow blanketing the neighborhood. It was peacefully quiet—no, more than that, it was totally silent. The land had been kissed by God and hushed into a remarkable silence.
I took in a deep breath of the cool fresh night air. It was invigorating. Although the temperature was below freezing, in this brief moment of time I didn’t notice the cold. I could feel His presence in the silence and in the beauty of the snow kissed landscape. The scripture that immediately came to mind was from Isaiah 1:18, “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool.”
I sat down with my computer and started to write—fully intending to blog about this vivid scene. But somewhere in my ADD brain, my writing headed elsewhere and I fell asleep before finishing. Then the ‘snowmageddon’ events of the next few days interfered with any hopes of finishing that blog. Now in the midst of the slush of bloody hell (a phrase coined by my husband), I can more clearly see where God wanted me to go with this.
The next morning I woke up to the sound of freezing rain tapping on the skylight in our master bathroom. One hour later the power went out! As 22-year residents of the Seattle area, we were used to this drill. We managed to stay warm with a fire and cook on the outdoor gas grill. Dinner and games by candlelight were also on the agenda.
That night I again went outside to take in the beauty of the snow. The scene was dramatically different though. Instead of glistening white snow, there was darkness. The snow was still blanketing the ground, but with no street lights or house lights to illuminate it, the neighborhood was eerily dark. The silence was also gone. It was replaced by the buzzing of nearby generators.
The next day was the first time I ventured out in the snow. At this point it wasn’t fluffy white snow though. It was heavy, wet, ice crusted snow. It was slippery, crunchy, uneven and dirty. There was no more beauty in it. It became an unwelcome reminder of the lost days and lost work.
So what started out as ‘white as snow’ really did seem to revert back to that ‘red as crimson’ classification. Some of the snow melted, some of it became hard and some of it became dirty—not unlike our lives. God wants us to know that He sees us as white as snow. He wants us to know that even though we may feel dirty or crushed and ‘red as crimson’, that is not what we are.
As I reflect on the snow of the week, I can definitely see where Satan tried to thwart any enjoyment of it. He wanted us to isolate. He wanted us to become frustrated by our circumstances. He didn’t want the light to shine through. He wanted the darkness to rule.
In Isaiah 1:18, God used the analogy of comparing our sins to being white as snow to represent our purity in His sight. Our challenge is to choose to believe it, no matter what the circumstances.
Posted by ardisanelson on January 22, 2012
https://ardisanelson.com/2012/01/22/white-as-snow/






