• Why I Won’t Cry At Her Graduation

    Less than a week from today, on May 28th, 2022, my baby, my only child, Addison Elise Riley, will graduate from high school.  Emotions are high and with each momentous event (her FFA banquet, graduate Sunday at church, and baccalaureate) I’ve been surrounded by tears from other parents, my own parents, and Addie herself.  But I haven’t shed a tear…nor will I. Don’t misunderstand, though. I am greatly affected by these events.  Seeing her baby pictures on the screen brings back memories of days when life seemed slower and more intimate.  My heart is about to break facing the reality of her leaving home and closing this chapter of her…

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  • 10 Things I Wish I Had Known Before My Weight Loss Surgery

    Deciding to have weight loss surgery in 2009 was one of the hardest decisions of my life, and I didn’t take it lightly. Seminars. Internet searches.  Personal testimonials.  If anyone should have been prepared for the “life after,”  it was me.   But guess what?  When my surgery was completed, there were many surprises. Many things I wish SOMEONE had told me. If you are considering the life-altering decision to have weight loss surgery, please know that it isn’t for the weak.  In fact, if you can lose the weight without surgery, DO IT! Surgery should be your last option. But, if you are like me and realize that your choice is…

  • 7 Lies Christian Women Believe

    As I write this post, I am in the midst of a familiar battle.  This battle rages not on worldly fields, but in the darkest parts of my mind.  The lies and doubts come from every angle. Let’s face it. Almost all women, even Christian women, are bombarded with a plethora of worldly messages on a daily basis that seek to steal our joy and assurance. These post- modern, New Age subtleties infiltrate every crevice of our existence from the billboard on the freeway, to the pop-up ad invading our simple attempt to check an email. It’s no wonder that many completely innocent, well-meaning Christian women fall prey to the…

  • My Blue Sky…

      In 1999, I was diagnosed with a rare disorder of the esophagus called achalasia. For you non-medical folks (like me), this is a disorder where the muscle in my esophagus responsible for opening and closing when I eat (it’s called a sphincter muscle…teehee…) stopped working. Completely. As in, everything I ate came back up…  Yuck. Laparoscopic surgery in the summer of 1999 corrected the problem, but the “cure” was really just an incision across the non-functioning muscle to allow food to pass by.  Since I was so young, 22 at the time, doctors said the chances of the surgery permanently correcting the problem were small.  Their warning turned out…