Emily Tucker

books

Mommy Time

Emily TuckerComment



My Review

I really enjoyed reading through this devotional for new moms, especially since I am preparing now to welcome home a new baby in just a few short weeks. The best part of Mommy Time is that I don't think it necessarily has to only be for the new mom. It has been a great reminder to me of my past with Hayden as a new mommy and also in preparation for our new little guy. 

Sarah is great at relating her motherhood beginnings to scripture and helping you not feel alone in mommyhood. Much of the devotions are about her story as a mom but I completely related to her from the start with her less than desired birthing story to her reflecting on trying to understand who this new little person is now and who they will become. This book will help you to see yourself in a new way through your baby with honoring the Lord as your desired outcome through motherhood. 

From now on this book will be at the top of my list of go-to gifts for new mommies and maybe some not so new mommies. Those first days & months & even years can be hard as a mom, especially trying to find time for Bible study. What mom can say no to a great & easy way to incorporate scripture reflection into daily life. My plan is to re-read this devotional once little mister is here and just one at each feeding and you would finish it in just a couple weeks. 


Author Q & A
Sarah Arthur on Mommy Time

What is your hope for this book, Mommy Time? One of the best ways I’ve found to stay balanced during the crazy transition of motherhood has been to talk with other moms. And that’s what I hope this book is: a conversation, a story, one new mom sharing with other new moms what God is doing in her life. In that sense it’s less a devotional book than a memoir, or maybe a devotional memoir, tracking my spiritual reflections during the first three months of my son’s life. 

Tell me about the personal experience(s) that prompted you to write such a book. As a new mom, I felt totally overwhelmed by bringing a human being into our lives, not to mention all my bodily changes and the relentlessness of caregiving. Yes, there are lots of joys! But motherhood is hard. I thought it was important to be honest about that. So often Christians are tempted to sugarcoat their experience and cover it up with sentimentality. I wanted to open up a space for other moms to acknowledge their experience and say, “God is okay with the fact that I’m having a hard time. And God is here.”
How do you carve out time to spend in God’s Word in your busy life? I’ll be honest, whatever pattern of “quiet time” many Christians idealize was not invented by new moms. There have been seasons in my life when I deeply, intensely studied Scripture— through Bible classes in college, getting a master’s degree in theology, reading certain books, and attending certain small groups. But during this new season, I have had to draw from the well of those experiences rather than carve out new ones. I have had to tell myself, “Holding this child is what God has for me right now.” If I can free up one arm so that I can read a good devotional book, even better.

How did you write this book as a busy new mom? Why was it important for you to do so? A major shout-out to my husband and my son’s grandparents: I could not have written this book without them. When Micah was tiny, I didn’t write a thing. But writing is in my blood, in my bones. It’s one of the ways I connect with God. So in those early days, I couldn’t help thinking, “I’ve got to remember this moment, this thought. I need to write it down someday.” Once we finally settled into a routine, and I had childcare lined up, the writing began—and so did the opportunity to breathe, to spend time in God’s presence. It was a gift.

God is in control. Why is this truth so important for new moms? We live in a culture of fear: fear for our kids’ safety, fear that we won’t measure up as parents, fear that our children will flunk life, etc. And retailers prey on that fear. So we are surrounded by magazines and books and websites that try to sell us things to give us a false feeling of control. But the truth is, every day I have to unclench my fist and release Micah into the care of the One who made him in the first place. And that’s hard. But if I can practice it now, I can do it when Micah walks out the door with the car keys. Hopefully.

What encouragement would you provide to the new mom who is overwhelmed and feeling lost? You are not alone. Lots of moms, including me, fall into the trap of presenting ourselves as totally togetherwhich just perpetuates that feeling of isolation, like you’re the only one flunking motherhood. But we are all there, sister. I’m sitting here at my laptop unshowered with no idea what to make for dinner tonight, checking my phone fifty-seven times a minute to make sure Micah’s day care isn’t texting me about some crisis. So we’re in this together. And meanwhile, we have a God who holds us and our children in the palm of his hand, who isn’t particularly concerned that the same load of laundry has been in the washer for three days. We rest in grace.

In your book, you say that “motherhood is itself a spiritual discipline.” What do you mean by this? Christians often talk about certain spiritual actions or practices that bring us into the presence of God, that deepen our relationship with Jesus. We talk about Bible study, prayer, worship, serving others, etc. But through motherhood, I’ve realized that we can also seek God in the everyday ordinariness of caregiving. The working class, the poor, the enslaved, and illiterate Christians have been doing this for centuries without ten minutes each morning to pray or read Scripture. It is not beneath us to pray while folding laundry. In fact, there is a sense in which having such focus requires more discipline. If we let God in, motherhood can help us grow stronger spiritual muscles and become more like Jesus.

You endeavor to help moms cultivate “awareness of God’s presence in the small things, in the daily tasks of caring for infants.” Can you provide an example of this? It was my husband who began praying for my son’s body while giving him a bottlesince there isn’t much else to do besides sit there. He prays for Micah’s little feet, that he will stand strong in the Lord; for his legs, that he will walk with Jesus all his days; for his stomach, that he will “feed” on God’s Word; etc.—all the way up. Rather than texting or talking on the phone or checking Facebook, we can take those moments and turn our thoughts toward God.

In your book, you say that the idea of being a new mother “both exhilarates and terrifies me.” Can you explain what you mean by this? Motherhood is exhilarating because it’s a new adventure, a new challenge (for those who like such things), a chance to do something deeply and eternally meaningful. But it’s also terrifying—for all those same reasons. Adventures are difficult. They hurt, they change us, and not always for the better. And what if we mess things up? A whole new generation of humans will have us to thank for their years of therapy. But even deeper, there’s the reality of loss. We don’t want to look down the years (or sooner) and see the inevitable goodbye. And yet we have a God who, as a Parent, knows all those joys and heartbreaks.

As a new mom, what is the best advice or encouragement that you have received? Go easy on yourself. Nobody cares that you haven’t showered. Really. And if they do, hand them the baby and say, “Thank you for helping.” Then soak in the tub for a long, long time. Because someday soon our kids will start to pick up on the fact that we really don’t mean it when we claim God is in control. But he is. 



 Thank you to Tyndale House Publishers who provided me with a complimentary copy of this book


2010-the book list

Emily TuckerComment
So heres the update on what books I finished last year:

-Treasuring God in Our Traditions
-The First 90 Days of Marriage
-Sink Reflections
-The Teashop Girls
-Kitchen Confidential
-Miserly Moms
-The Girls From Ames
-The Carrie Diaries
-Start Your Family
-What to Expect Before You're Expecting
-Twenties Girl
-MacArthur Acts Bible Study
-Shopaholic and Baby
-Mini Shopaholic


14 books in total finished and who knows how many unfinished. I kinda have that problem where you start a book, take a break from it and not come back to it till a year later and you then have to re-read what you already read. 

Already working on a list for this year... we shall see how that goes definitely will be less than previous years since our baby is due in July. But look for that list coming soon. 

New book list

Emily TuckerComment
I've decided that the way the list was before was not as appealing to me.. like what if a book just came out and I wanted to read that am I not allowed to read it because its not on my list. So now I will add them as I go! 

Category: 1: Christian Living
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Category: 7: from 1001 books to read before you die list
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Category: 8: Books into movies
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eek..

Emily TuckerComment
Its been so long since I blogged. Welp... probably because I was on a roll there for a while.

I do have an update to my reading list though. 

Count 12 books down, 88 to go

Books Read in 2010
-Twenties Girl
-John MacArthur Acts Bible study
-What to Expect Before You're Expecting
-Start Your Family
-The Carrie Diaries
-The Girls from Ames
-Miserly Moms
-Kitchen Confidential
-The Teashop Girls
-Sink Reflections
-The First 90 Days of Marriage
-Treasuring God in Our Traditions


Review

Twenties Girl

by Sophie Kinsella Twenties Girl, A Novel First Edition first Printing edition

This was a great book and I read it so fast. I personally have loved all of Sophie Kinsella's books that I have read so I wasn't surprised that I liked this one just as much as her others. I read this on my new Kindle, something to talk about in another blog post, I think I read slightly faster on my Kindle. Studies have showed people read slower on them than reading a regular book but I'm not sure if that is always true. I swear I felt faster!

xoxo

p.s. Is it really almost October??

book update

Emily TuckerComment
Count 9 books down, 91 to go hahahaha... we shall see how this goes.
At the moment I'm reading roughly 6 books which is probably why this isn't going very quickly.

Books Read in 2010
-Start Your Family
-The Carrie Diaries
-The Girls from Ames
-Miserly Moms
-Kitchen Confidential
-The Teashop Girls
-Sink Reflections
-The First 90 Days of Marriage
-Treasuring God in Our Traditions

xoxo

2 more down

Emily TuckerComment


Just finished this book over the weekend and am very glad that I have read it. As I said before it is a great program to get you on the track to having a clean and decluttered home.



and just now finished this book its a YA 9-13 yr. old read but its cute cover caught my eye at Barnes&Noble and I knew I had to read it. Thats right I do judge some books by their cover lol. Sometimes its fun to read YA books (twilight... harry potter.. sisterhood of the traveling pants, etc..) I usually only read more science fiction type ones but I cannot resist tea themed things especially since my re-ignited extreme love of tea. Oh and YA books are really easy to read, I mean not to brag or anything but I read this in 4 days and with my goal of 100 books this year which is daunting I need a few books like this on my list.

xoxo...

p.s. I do have a list of all the books I am planning to read this year but I have added and subtracted here and there to include books I see or hear about and want to add, like in the case of The Teashop Girls. There are actually 10 categories, 10 books in each category. This is called 10/10/10 or 10 categories, 10 books, in 2010. I will put up the list in my next post.

reading count 4 out of 100, 96 to go, 2 in progress