Holy In The Daily
Blog posts to help women over 50 face their challenges with clarity, confidence, and resilience.
Topics
- Adult children
- Advent
- Age gracefully
- Aging Parents
- At work
- Breakfast
- Camp Grandma or Cousin...
- Celtic Christianity
- Communion
- Create your legacy
- Crock Pot
- Daily
- Daily chores
- Death, grief, and heaven
- Desserts
- Difficult people
- Don't forget to laugh
- Easter
- Emotional overload
- Empty nest
- Experiencing Jesus
- Fall
- Fasting
- Friendships
- God's Promises
- Grandchildren
- Healing prayers
- Holidays
- How to change unhealth...
- Job
- Lent
- Mission
- Monday's Moment Videos
- My-village
- News
- Overwhelm
- Personal Growth
- Personal affirmation
- Prayer
- Quiet Moments
- Raising grandchildren
- Recipes
- Recommended reading
- Relationship Challenges
- Relationships
- Sabbath
- Seasons
- Side Dishes
- Soul Breaks
- Soul Care
It's Time to Get to Know Your Invisible Bridegroom
How do you get to know someone you can’t see—someone who isn’t here like other people are here? How do you grow in relationship with Jesus--the invisible Bridegroom?
The Secret to Balancing Your Busy Life this Christmas
For many families the busy Christmas season seems to move at a pace where catching one’s breath happens driving from activity to activity. Here the secret to balancing your life.
Are You Comfortable Sitting in God's Lap?
God has an official seat where he regularly invites you to climb up onto his lap. Perhaps your memories of your parents or grandparents make this an easy adventure—perhaps not.
Where Do You Go For Thinkin' Time?
Thinkin’ time is a lost art. Our culture is so busy that solitude and silence often equal boredom. It's hard to find a quiet space. Where do you go for thinkin' time?
Do You Have Time to Listen for the Heartbeat of Jesus?
Is your life quiet enough to hear the heartbeat of Jesus? How do we find the time to really listen for a sound so foreign that we might not even know what we are listening for?
The Importance of Doing Nothing
Sometimes the most important thing you can do is nothing. As the great theologian Winnie the Pooh said, . . . .