Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Mentoring

 Mentoring Our church offers a Bible study each summer. One that is much less stressful and lower key than what we offer during the year. We do it because we recognize that many women in our church simply cannot commit to our structured studies that are offered in the fall and spring. They usually run six weeks, and we have a different one of our very gifted teachers present the lesson, then we break out into smaller groups. This year’s study was on Rest. I was assigned a group that had an interesting range of spiritual maturity. A couple of the women are very well grounded, some obviously not. 

 While sitting there, I strongly felt the Holy Spirit leading me to seek out a mentoring relationship with one of the younger ladies present. I don’t know what it was that drew me to her, but I knew I needed to talk to her. Sue (name changed for her privacy) and I met for tea shortly after the study ended. She just about jumped when I asked, after we talked for quite a while, if she were interested in being mentored by me. I wasn’t sure if it was the right thing to do, but her response made it apparent that this was orchestrated by God. 

I am not going to give enough details that Sue would be recognizable, as I mention above this is a pseudonym to protect her. She is dealing with a lot of trauma; I want to protect her from that and honor our relationship as well. She meets with one of the men in our church, who, when I spoke with him about this, told me she really needed a woman’s perspective on a lot of the issues she is dealing with. So, he is happy I’m meeting with her. I have also sought the blessing of our pastor. I certainly did not want to enter this relationship without their knowledge/approval. 

 We have started with Melissa B. Kruger’s book Growing Together, Taking Mentoring Beyond Small Talk and Prayer Requests, published by Crossway. It’s been a great experience – the way things have been exactly what Sue needed, and dovetailing with not only our Discipleship Hour, but the weekly study we are both in on Ephesians, and even often our pastor’s messages. They have all combined to reveal an area that Sue has been struggling with that particular week. 

 We’ve taken a few weeks off for the holidays and hope to resume next week. We have about three weeks left in this book. The next one we are going to tackle is one recommended by our pastor – Jen Wilkin’s None Like Him subtitled 10 Ways God is Different From Us – and That’s a Good Thing! It’s published by Crossway as well. What I have learned through this is that you learn as much, if not more, when serving as a mentor and teacher. 

The blessings I have reaped have been immeasurable. Sue know she can call me with any issues, and she has. I’ve prayed with her and I have seen her grow. I look forward to much more of that in the months to come! 

Post Script. 

Sadly, while this was sitting in draft mode, Sue relapsed. She went into rehab but did not do well coming out and has stopped all mentoring, along with withdrawing her membership at church. When I spoke with our pastor, he said she made it clear not to contact her. So, she is now on her own. I pray that the Lord will continue his work in her and draw her, once again, to him. It was a good opportunity, and I hope that I will have another one like it.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Jane Austen Quilt

 For whatever reason, I never really got into Jane Austen's writings. My interests were more towards Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, My Side of the Mountain, Nancy Drew - you know, the adventure books where I could get lost and not in romance books. I suppose because I never really got romance when I was in high school. I thought I'd never have that kind of **starry eye** love, so they didn't appeal to me at all. I really should go read, or at the very least, listen to her writings!  I have seen some of the movie adaptations, and ... sorry ... but they were "eh" 😂. Maybe it's time to go back and watch one again - which one would you recommend?? 

That aside, in May 2024 we took a bucket list trip to the UK.  We started out the trip in Bath, where we visited the Jane Austen house. I am a huge history/historical/museum fan though, so I loved it.  Naturally, as I tend to do, I sought out a quilt shop, or as they call it, a patchwork shop.  I found one, and bought this lovely fabric, that has now been sitting here for a year and a half. It's time to do something with it.  


I'm going to head to the Quilter's Market today to get some coordinating burgundy. I already have some cream. I think I'm going to do a fussy cut around the larger motif, then frame it it alternating strips of the flowers/cream/burgundy.  I'm making a table runner, wall hanging and placemats out of it, and I think I should have enough for all that.  Stay tuned! 

Saturday - I found the fabric I need and while waiting to get it cut, talked with the clerk. She gave me the link to a strip quilt that will work perfectly. It's here: https://www.alandacraft.com/2024/07/02/lap-quilt-tutorial/  I just need to play around with the flowers and the solid burgundy and see which one I want where.  Two of the strips will be a bit larger than the pattern calls for, so the quilt will actually be a bit longer, and I'll decide on borders once I have it finished.  I'd really like to try to free motion this one using the template I got, but I'll need to try that out first to see if I can get the hang of it!  The table runner design is still a bit up in the air, I may still go with the fussy cut block with graduating width strips like a log cabin block.  First plan is to get the wall hanging done, then proceed from there.  And I think I've scrapped the idea of placemats, but will make napkins instead. 

Oh - my new cutting mat came, so I'm ready to go.