Category: Reviews

  • You Can Stay Home with Your Kids

    You Can Stay Home with Your Kids

    I’ve been home with my girls since my youngest was born. She’s now five. Over the past five years people have said to me, “I wish I had the privilege of staying home with my kids” or “I never had the privilege of staying home with my kids.” However, I never thought of it as a privilege. I thought of it more as a sacrifice.

    I’m not naive enough to think that every mom can stay at home with her kids. I know that it is very hard, and not possible for some women. However, I do believe that more women can stay at home than think they can. It’s not so much about numbers working out of paper and more about sacrificing in order to follow a calling on your life – motherhood.

    Staying-at-Home Is a Sacrifice

    When I decided to quit my teaching career and come home with my firstborn, it wasn’t because it was less expensive to be at home than pay for childcare. With a master’s degree, my income was enough that it would have contributed positively to our finances. Plus, my education opened up doors for me to work in other areas of education that earned more. But I felt convicted that the wiser choice was for me to be at home, and so we sacrificed that income to make it happen.

    At times this added stress and burden to my husband. He felt the weight of providing for an entire family. It sometimes was a sacrifice of peace and comfort in our home. But we knew it was a season of life, and we knew that God would provide for us.

    Staying-at-Home Is a Season

    The first six years of a child’s life are significant. These are called “the formative years” because the majority of a child’s formative development occurs. But as is all rhythms of life, it is a season. Of course, motherhood continues past age six, but that doesn’t mean there will not be opportunities for work after these important formative years when children become more independent.

    Of course many women stay-at-home throughout their children’s time at home and beyond, but if this isn’t a possibility or a desire, remember that staying-at-home can be for just a season. It doesn’t have to be forever.

    For me, being home full-time will be for a season. I do not know what I will do next – whether I’ll go back into teaching or consulting or do something different – but I do know that it is a season.

    Staying-at-Home Requires Prioritizing

    When we made the decision for me to stay-at-home, we also prioritized what we wanted to do with our money. Obviously, everybody’s situation is different, but for us staying out of debt was our biggest priority. To make that happen there were years that we did not go on vacation. We did not have memberships to sports clubs. We did not push for the bigger house, and I drove my 2003 Toyota Camry with over 100,000 miles on it until after my second baby was born.

    When friends would say to me, “I wish I could stay home,” I often thought to myself, “I wish I had your new car!” Most people cannot stay-at-home and continue an elaborate lifestyle of big houses, new cars, vacations, and name-brand clothes. Staying at home requires prioritizing.

    Staying at Home Requires Creativity

    When you decide to stay home with your kids, you can get creative with ways to earn a little extra money from home. I have always loved to write, and I now earn some extra money each month as a freelance writer. I also earn money from a direct sales business.

    I think the misconception with these ideas is that they will allow you to make a part-time or even full-time income. And they very well could over time. But for the majority of people, this extra money is typically just enough to pay one bill a month or one extracurricular activity for your child. I think women get discouraged when they start earning money from home and it doesn’t produce what they thought it would or what they see it producing for other women.

    You Can Stay Home with Your Kids – The Book

    As you can tell, I am passionate about moms staying home with their kids, and I think more moms can make it happen than think they can! My friend Erin, from The Humbled Homemaker, shares this passion, and she wrote a wonderful book, You Can Stay Home with Your Kids, to help moms stay at home with their kids!

    What do I love about this book? It is packed full of practical tips and advice to help you make staying at home a reality. Each chapter includes an action step for you to take to implement the ideas Erin shares. There is also recipes, resources, and tools throughout the book for you to use including free printables for you to download from Erin’s website.

    The chapters in the book include:

    • Curb Spending
    • Eat Well on a Budget
    • DIY Household Products
    • Entertain Your Family Without Spending a Fortune
    • Shop Secondhand and Sales
    • Provide for Health-Care Needs
    • Hunt Houses and Vehicles
    • Create More Income

    This is not a book to teach you how to create a full-time income from home. It is not a book that shows you how to keep your present lifestyle of two incomes while staying at home with your kids. This is a book that helps you sacrifice well. It helps you make the most of this season of motherhood with peace and joy.

    And There are Pre-Order Gifts for You!

    You Can Stay Home with Your Kids is available for purchase on April 10th. However, if you pre-order it now you will receive these fun bonuses from ErinWoven Heart ebook, Motherhood Art Print, 2-Week Aldi Meal Plan, and Bath Bombs and Fudge!

    You have until launch day – April 10th at 11:59 p.m. EST – to order and receive these bonuses.

     

    If you are a stay-at-home mom who would like more margin in your budget, or you’re a mom or soon-to-be mom who would like to stay-at-home with your kids, You Can Stay Home with Your Kids is for you! Pre-order today so that you can get all the fun pre-order gifts!

    Tell me in the comments … are you a stay-at-home mom or do you wish to be?

  • Jewelry that Matters :: Gracewear Collection Review

    Do you know what stresses me out the most about Christmas – or any holiday for that matter, including birthdays? Buying gifts. I love to give gifts, but I don’t love to buy them – meaning pick them out, not spend the money. Gift choosing is not my spiritual gift.

    What makes it harder is that recently I’ve been overwhelmed with all the stuff around me that I don’t use and that doesn’t mean anything to me. So when I go to buy gifts, I don’t want to give someone something that will be considered more stuff for them either. It’s a waste of money for me, and it’s a burden for them. I want to give them something that has meaning and is useful because that’s what I want in my life.

    Gracewear Collection is the perfect place to shop for that useful and meaningful gift.

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  • Morgan McFarlin :: An Interview with a Single Woman Making a Difference

    It’s day 31 of 31 Days of Interviews with Single Women. The last day of the series! You can find a list of all the interviews in this post.

    Also, be sure to enter the giveaway to win an autographed copy of Allison K. Flexer’s new book Truth, Lies, and the Single Woman at the bottom of today’s interview. This giveaway will continue through Friday!

    Today I’m talking with Morgan McFarlin! Morgan says:

    The secret to living a purposeful and fulfilling life? Realizing that God created me distinctly and for a unique purpose. My purpose is not dependent on my relationship status, rather, it is essential to God’s plan that I live each day fully. Do I believe that God means for me to be married someday? Yes, of course. But this doesn’t mean that I can sit around and wait to “start my life” when Mr. Right saunters in. I don’t want to look back on this time in my life and have any regrets. And I know that if I don’t embrace the now, right now, I will eventually wish I had.

    I can relate so much to Morgan’s interview! Like Morgan, all I wanted to be was a wife and mother. This is hard as a single woman because you question your purpose when marriage isn’t a reality at the time. I also love that Morgan supports Natural Family Planning. I use Natural Family Planning. So sit back and enjoy this wonderful interiew with Morgan that ends our 31 Days series !

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  • Faith McHaney :: An Interview with a Single Woman Making a Difference

    It’s day 30 of 31 Days of Interviews with Single Women. You can find a list of all the interviews in this post.

    Also, be sure to enter the giveaway to win an autographed copy of Allison K. Flexer’s new book Truth, Lies, and the Single Woman at the bottom of today’s interview. This giveaway will continue through Friday!

    Today I’m talking with Faith McHaney! Faith says:

    My advice would be to get before the Lord and truly find out what His will is for your life. That’s why you’re here, to fulfill His will for your life, and His will for you will happen whether you’re married or not. God created YOU for a purpose and He will definitely show it to you, and you don’t have to be married to carry out that purpose. Be encouraged and trust God. 

    Faith is 26-years-old and lives in Russellville, Alabama. She has a God-story filled with redemption and healing after facing depression and drug abuse. Read more about Faith below!

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  • Beth Anne Eretto :: An Interview with a Single Woman Making a Difference

    It’s day 29 of 31 Days of Interviews with Single Women. You can find a list of all the interviews in this post.

    Also, be sure to enter the giveaway to win an autographed copy of Allison K. Flexer’s new book Truth, Lies, and the Single Woman at the bottom of today’s interview. This giveaway will continue through Friday!

    Today I’m talking with Beth Anne Eretto! Beth Anne says:

    Do things you have always wanted to do: travel, start a business, learn to sew, buy a Kitchenaid! Trust me you won’t regret doing any of these things before you get married. I love being able to travel a lot and think it really helps me grow as a single person.

    Beth Anne is 28-years-old living in Jacksonville, Florida. She is a virtual assistant and blogger! Be sure to check out Beth Anne on her blog Beth Anne’s Best!

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  • Katie Herzing :: An Interview with a Single Woman Making a Difference

    It’s day 28 of 31 Days of Interviews with Single Women. You can find a list of all the interviews in this post.

    Also, be sure to enter the giveaway to win an autographed copy of Allison K. Flexer’s new book Truth, Lies, and the Single Woman at the bottom of today’s interview. This giveaway will continue through Friday!

    Today I’m talking with Katie Herzing! Katie says:

    After I read Emily Stimpson’s book The Catholic Girl’s Survival Guide for the Single Years, I changed a few of my thoughts on the single years. She made one interesting point that being single is a choice – that I’m not married right now because I’m choosing not to be. It is my choice to be single. I’m choosing to wait for God’s Plan, not my own. I’m choosing to uphold my future marriage to a higher standard based on mutual faith in God.

    Katie is a woman after my own heart! She is originally from Pennsylvania, but now lives in Charlotte, NC and loves the south! She says, “I love being a Southern girl and cannot see myself moving back north any time soon.” Yay! You may know, but I am also a southerner – born and raised – and I love all things south! Katie blogs at Waiting for Patience, so be sure to connect with her there, too!

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