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Thursday, August 25, 2011

Growth Groups


This weekend marks the beginning of another “semester” for me as I prepare with dozens of other student leaders at Grace Bible Church for fall Growth Groups. Last year, I led a group of college girls in my living room every Wednesday night, and I even shared with you tidbits of what those nights looked like as we explored the book of Colossians.
I am so excited about our study this fall over Ruth. I’m glad that we will get to dig into some Old Testament narrative and do an in-depth study over a part of the Bible that requires much more inductive reasoning than the immediately-applicable New Testament. And I am excited that I, a young woman about to enter into marriage, get to tackle this unique text about Ruth and Boaz. SO excited about all of the conversations that we will get to have, specifically as women in the 21st century.
On that note, I will be leading Ruth on Thursday nights this year instead of Wednesdays. I truly hope that doesn’t disrupt any of the plans of the girls who joined me last year, but I am looking forward to living life with these girlfriends, both old and new.
If you are reading this and you have been looking for community in Bryan-College Station, please email me! I’d love to tell you more about this study and my heart behind these groups. Looking forward to our first meeting come September! I am getting the “back to school” buzz myself, just anticipating all that the Lord has for this fall for girls in every season of life!

Friday, August 19, 2011

Fill in the Blank Friday

 
 
1.   My idea of pure perfection would be       a week off with my honey somewhere tropical...oh wait, that's only 141 days away!

2.    Great Love       makes the world go 'round.

3.  If it weren't for    work and bills and rent    I'd    spend my days shopping, travelling, laying out, being with friends, and enjoying life  .

4.  Bloggers are   awesome people who give me ideas daily and motivate me to be more creative, better at writing, and capturing the moments .

5.  If I had    20 trillion dollars    I'd buy you    the American economy back, then I'd spend a few tril on myself. You're welcome for the economy.

6.  I'm glad it's Friday because     what is better than the weekend? Clayton and I are taking engagement pictures and starting our registry this weekend, what could be more fun?


7.  Something I'm excited about is     getting married...but more immediately, Fightin' Texas Aggie and Dallas Cowboys football!
 
 
Have a great weekend, everyone! It's FRIDAY!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Aggieland Bucket List


Alright, ladies and gentleman, the final lap in Aggieland has officially begun! 9 months left in this crazy place to do all of the things I’ve set out to do. Some I’ve done, some I’ve yet to do. Some I should have done in college, but I’ve still got time. Anything I should add? Who wants to help me finish this baby?
-          Attend Muster
-          Attend Silver Taps
-          Mug down at Midnight Yell
-          Dunk that Aggie bling
-          Visit the George Bush Museum
-          Eat at the Dixie Chicken
-          A&M v. tu on Thanksgiving Day
-          Brazos Valley Bingo
-          Pond Hopping
-          Participate in Big Event
-          Eat at Hullabaloo Diner
-          Eat at Potato Shack
-          Picnic in Academic Plaza
-          Bonfire Memorial
-          Get pulled over by a bike cop on campus
-          Jog Research park
-          Pictures under the Century Tree
-          Roadtrip to an away game
-          Kiss my date when the Aggies score
-          Karaoke
-          Sing the Aggie War Hymn at the Texas Hall of Fame
-          Slam Poetry at Revolution CafĂ©
-          Senior Boot Line on Kyle Field
-          Get on the Jumbotron
-          Watch the game from a suite
-          Run a half marathon
-          First Friday in Downtown Bryan
-          Visit the Bluebell Factory
-          Taco Tuesday at Rosa’s
-          Attend a concert at Wolf Pen Creek
-          Have a ring for each hand
-          Girls night in the Benjamin Knox Gallery
-          Spend the entire night studying in a coffee shop
-          Win a Big 12 Championship and get a BCS bowl game!

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Home

I’m ready to go home.
143 days to go. And while I will promise to soak up every last second of this final “semester” as a single girl living with her roommates in this college town, I’m ready to go home. Because whether home is a temporary apartment in College Station while Clayton finishes his degree this spring, or another temporary apartment wherever he lands his first job, home is where he is, and I’m becoming more and more aware of that.
I’ve loved Clayton for as long as I can remember dating him. Almost five years is a long time to think back on and actually pin down an exact moment I remember falling in love with him. As far as my mind can think, I remember loving him. My love grew stronger through the distance in that first year of college. My love grew deeper in my sophomore year as we got to experience life together in close proximity. My love grew more resilient and steadfast through a challenging period in our lives. And since our engagement, my love has grown in expectancy at what is to come.
In anticipation of our marriage, I’ve received so much advice, encouragement, and direction in how to love my husband well after those vows are spoken and the craziness of the wedding is over. That part, that life beyond the wedding, is what brings tears to my eyes. More beautiful than any one-time-occasion white dress or well-crafted flower bouquet or words written to express the deepest emotions of our hearts, is the marriage itself. The actual follow-through of the vows we will swear before God and man- that’s the most beautiful part of all of this, the part that I simply cannot wait for.
I can’t wait to come home to him, and just him.  I can’t wait to talk over dinners that I’m bound to mess up and that he’ll either have to fix or order take-out. I can’t wait to decorate our someday-home and begin the nesting process that is absolutely dying to jump out of my skin right now. I can’t wait to do his laundry, clean his dishes, wake him up in the morning before I leave for work, pray with him each night before we go to bed, and always make his home a place he can relax, unwind, and be the husband he longs to be in.
I’ve always wanted to be a wife. And I know that I will not always have warm fuzzies about washing his stinky socks or fighting over the air conditioner or cleaning up after him every time he leaves his dirty dishes in the sink. And I know I won’t ever be the perfect wife, and he won’t ever be the perfect husband. But I want to be the very best wife I can be, one that submits herself to the Lord and to her husband, that longs to respect him in the way I care for his home, in the way that I follow his leadership, in the way that I pray for him and our someday children. I want to be the woman that he can be so happy to come home to, the one he has the most fun with, the one who is easy to love until the day he dies.
Home is where he is. That’s why I am so thankful that the Lord allowed me to find work here in College Station and enjoy our engagement period just a few streets over from him. I’m so grateful that marriage is just around the corner as well, and that this long waiting-period where we’ve known and wanted but not been promised that this life was meant to be shared together can finally come to be on January 7th. No matter how humble our beginnings are bound to be, I’m just ready to be with him. Love can’t pay the bills, but work ethic built around a desire to honor and love one another in provision sure can.
I’m ready for my family to grow. I love my family with all of my heart, they are the most precious people in the world to me, and I cannot wait for Clayton to join my side and to also join the Messinger family as well. Family is the foundation of how God designed society to operate, and the joining together of two families, the leaving and cleaving of the bride and groom, is not only symbolic of his love for us, it is also full of so much joy. I’m so happy to know that both Clayton and I have had the best examples and illustrations of what a Godly home should look like, and we are so blessed to have loving and gracious parents that will support us, mentor us, and pray for us as we embark on this next phase in life.
I can’t wait to learn from Clayton. He has so much wisdom and knowledge about Scripture, and He is so in tune with the Spirit. He’s not hard to follow, and if I find myself struggling to do so, it will most likely be out of a lack of faith in me instead of a lack in him. He ministers with the biggest heart and has such a passion for discipleship and mentoring. Watching his relationships with other men, whether they be older, younger, or his peers, is the biggest encouragement to me and our future as I know that not only does he seek wisdom and discernment, he longs to put it into practice, pass it on, and receive accountability for it. He loves me in all the right ways- he encourages me, praises me, protects me, and spoils me. But he also rebukes and corrects me, takes the reigns away from me when it’s not my job, and stands up for me when the situation calls. He teaches me so much through his actions, especially through his prayer for our future and His all-consuming desire to seek Him first in all things and to honor Him above and before anything else, especially in the foundation and outpouring of our coming marriage.
Clayton Messinger, I can’t wait to be your wife. I can’t wait to learn to love you more and more in ways that only time and marriage could achieve. I can’t imagine at this moment loving you anymore than I already do, but I know that what lies ahead is a beautiful, undeserved gift of love from our Father, and I can’t wait to open that and explore it with you. 143 days seems both like an eternity and the blink of an eye…we’ll see which one it is. Regardless, I am more excited about day 144 than 143, because while everyone says it is your wedding day that is the best day of your life, I think that the first full day when I am completely yours will be better than only being yours for a half day. And for that matter, I think 145, 146, 147, and every day after that will only get better as I grow into my role as Mrs. Clayton Messinger and learn what it means to be the caretaker of your home. I cannot think of a more honorable or meaningful role to play on this earth than the role of being your wife and ministry partner.
We are going to have SO MUCH FUN!

Friday, August 12, 2011

Southern by the Grace of God

So, there’s been plenty of serious talks around these parts about a fancy little move East. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, check this. It seems to be a fairly believable rumor, and while there are plenty of opinions circulating around Aggieland and the Big Twelve, I’m here to address the fairly obvious positive: how great would the SEC and all their fabulous traditions be for a sweet southern school like A&M? A few things I’ll be anticipating come 2013 if this whole deal does go through:
The men in fancy ties
Hmm, and what will this look like come 2013?
Much prettier drive to away games than say, Waco, Lubbock, or oh, any school in the Big 12 period.
Can someone say excuse to buy a Lilly Pullitzer?
Mmm, I could go for this southern soul food on a morning tailgate.
Or some goo'ole, southern-style sweet tea! Straight out of the mason jar, of course.
Pull out the curling iron, hairspray, and a teasing comb, ladies! (oh wait, I already do that...time to go bigger!)
Gentlemen, time to get frat-tastic! Don't know how you'll stand the heat in these, but you gotta if we're ever gonna fit in with the SEC crowd.
Now, I already think our tailgating is top notch, but we're going to have to step it up with these southern folk!
The Southern menu.

And now for some secrets to being the southern belles we were always meant to be
 New standard for Aggie games
Some things will never change
Always :)
Ain't this the truth!
Sneaky little southern girls!
LOVE.
Such a helpful phrase that the north truly misses out on
Naturally
Not a problem for me!
Time to freshen up on my southern accent and "charm" :)
Stay classy, southern ladies
Goes with everything.
Ah, it's good to be southern :)

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

20-Somethings

So, I turned 22 yesterday. I call 22 The Official 21. There is nothing “old” sounding about 22, but it does sound older than 21. For the past year, whenever I have told people that I am 21, most make some kind of snarky remark about when they were 21 and all the mischief they got into, how incredibly young I am, on and on and on. Here’s what I have to say to that- yes, I am young, and I could not be happier that I am still in my early twenties. I love being young, I don’t particularly want to be any older than I am today. But at age 22, I have already been working full time for over a year, so please, feel free to joke around about how young I am, but also remember that I’m not just any 22-year-old. I don’t mean to be a braggart in the least bit- I’m a very young member of the class of 2010, that’s just been my lot, but in many ways I feel that I act perfectly my age. I believe that most 22-year-olds, whether they have full time jobs or not, should have a certain level of maturity, a level that we do not hold our young-20’s responsible to anymore.
So, here’s my rant lesson today- why is our generation responsible for so much less than the generations before us, and who is to blame for this?
I was thinking today about what the age 22 implies- long gone are the monumental birthdays; we’re just counting by 5’s and 10’s now to count the years of our lives down (depressing thought). Twenty-two in this day and age denotes a recent or soon-to-be college grad. Typically, 22’s are on the job hunt, looking for some way to put money in the bank, trying to retroactively fix their credit nightmare they created in college, living at home, avoiding the real world, trying to NOT settle down, living incredibly selfishly, and desiring to live at the level of their parents without the income of their parents, thus pushing them further into debt. This by no means defines the entirety of the 22’s, but it is more the rule than the exception.
When I think about what 22 implied in the bygone eras of our parents, our grandparents, and even our great grandparents, I think 22 looked a lot different. Admittedly, our parents may not have been quite as responsible at 22 as our grandparents were, but I feel as if they might have had a bit more focus, if for nothing else than they didn’t live in a world that bailed them out of every mistake they made. I feel that college had a bit more focus for them, because college was more of a privilege for them than it is for us- for us, it was a right of passage, a 4-year blip of life that was yours to be as immature and self-indulgent as possible. Not everyone had college degrees back then, so it was truly a choice to advance your career by completing higher education.
It’s really our grandparents’ era that makes me look and think, “What are we doing with our 20’s?” “The Greatest Generation” earned their title through unyielding loyalty to country and family, through conviction, through self-sacrifice, and through an understanding that their family’s and their country’s success was their responsibility, that the burden of securing freedom lay directly on their shoulders. And they did not hesitate. They defined for us hard work, perseverance, strength, faith, and courage. I so admire that generation. We are so lacking those traits that made our country what it was, and I fear that we are on the brink of losing what we have in America. That is not fair to their legacy.
Sure, we’ve done so much to advance our nation in many ways since the 40’s-60’s. We’ve become a more equal nation and we’ve advanced technology to a point where life spans are longer than ever before. But we’ve also made ourselves an incredibly lazy nation, one that relies on technology and convenience. We are an instant gratification nation, wanting what we want when we want it, and claiming all sorts of injustices when it doesn’t go our way. This whole idea of who we are today is nothing new at all- you’ve probably heard it a million times over. I, however, want to camp out on the aforementioned topic of what is going on with our 20-somethings, and how we can make them better.
I’ve heard every excuse in the book for my generation- we grew up only knowing technology, we are children of the Baby Boomer generation that got us to this point, we were taught from an early age how to get what we want out of life. Yes, in so many ways, our childhood was marred by the sins of our parents. We’re children of rampant divorce rates, growing up in daycare centers year-round, the “everyone’s a winner” mentality that cheapened hard work. There are certainly flaws in the ways that our parents reared us, but we are not victims.
WE ARE NOT VICTIMS. Yes, we CAN help the way we are, we aren’t condemned to being spoiled little brats that complain about every injustice to ourselves. We don’t have to be ignorant of the world around us, we CAN think for ourselves. We have the ability to take part in our government, to not be so easily swayed by the media. Just because we SEE 20-something’s depicted as “children” on television, doing everything they can to not accept the responsibilities of life, telling themselves that family and career can wait until they’re done with “living for themselves,” doesn’t mean that’s who we are or who we have to be.
I’m tired of it, really. 22 does not mean today what it meant 50 years ago. Why can’t 22’s today be responsible spenders, take responsibility for their actions, invest towards their future, not be fearful of getting married and starting a family. Why are we putting off our lives? I’m not saying I’m completely going against the grain and carrying the torch to “save our generation,” but I would like to stand up for us and say that we can be self-sufficient, hard-working, mature adults and not entitled little brats. I’d like to say that having a steady career that pays the bills is not boring, it’s responsible. Getting married is not the end of my life, it’s the beginning of a new chapter of following the Lord in His plan for my life. I didn’t graduate early because I’m a killjoy, I did it to help my parents and myself as we face the reality of college loan debt.
I’m not a victim of this culture; it may have influenced me, but I take responsibility where I have failed. I didn’t sin blindly, there are no excuses; where I have been selfish, there was a conscious sin nature that led me to disobedience. We are 20-somethings, we’re not children. Stop letting the world tell you that you are. You’re more than a quarter of the way through your life, for goodness sakes. Put your big kid panties on, (wo)man up, and take responsibility for your successes and your failures. Stop letting culture take credit for both. What I’m not saying is don’t have any fun; what I am saying is, have the most fun you can possibly dream up, but work before you play and your play won’t come back to bite you years down the road, and your fun will be a LOT more fun.
You’re not a victim, so stop acting like one.