I have no words. I cried watching Kobe took his last walk into and out from the court for the last time. The speeches and tributes done by other people for him and his final words before leaving the court got me tearing up. I don’t think he could’ve ended his career any better. I think it was a perfect way to exit the game that he has grown to love so much for good. What can I say? I love basketball, I really do.
12 December, 2016 - Purpose
Logically Illogical
We overthink.
As much as this statement probably doesn’t apply to everyone, but I believe it does to most of us. Be it conscious or unconsciously, we push our minds to think of things we are not yet able to figure out. We put pressures upon ourselves to decipher something we can’t even define, yet.
So, I was sitting down with a scrap paper that’s half full of scribbles wondering what to write about. And this grand, ever overwh . . . . .
12 December, 2016 - Purpose
Everyday I Mop the House
Perspective changes everything.
This has become a common theme of my life in the past few months. I learned that the way I see things changes things. Of course, the things don’t change just because I look at it in a different way. A blue T-shirt is still a blue T-shirt, no matter which angle I choose to stare at it from. An illness is still something to be healed from, a . . . . .
12 December, 2016 - Purpose
The Heart of your Calling
I was once in a season of trying to figure my life calling. It was a season that lasted for a (long) while. I remember the moment when I started asking myself, it was back in High School. Then continued all the way through College, early marriage, until I became a stay home mom of three young children.
12 December, 2016 - Purpose
Move Me
But none of these move me; nor do I count my life dear to myself, so that I may finish my race with joy, and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God. -Acts 20:24
In the game "Paint Me a Portrait", people move and act out a scene till the game master says, "Stop". Observing the people frozen . . . . .