Revolution of Love

Revolution of Love

Do small things with great love.

Coming Soon: “Style, Sex, and Substance: 10 Catholic Women Consider the Things that Really Matter”

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I was so excited to hear that one of my favorite bloggers, Hailey at Betty Beguiles, has a new book coming out in spring. It is titled Style, Sex, and Substance: 10 Catholic Women Consider the Things that Really Matter and features many of my favorite Catholic female writers, including Simcha Fisher, Danielle Bean, Rachel Balducci, Betty Duffy, Jennifer Fulwiler, Rebecca Teti, Karen Edmisten, Anna Mitchell and Barbara Nicolosi. How cool is that?
Here is a summary of the book.

In Style, Sex, and Substance: 10 Catholic Women Consider the Things that Really Matter, ten of the top Catholic female writers come together to offer tips, encouragement, and a bit of humor for their sisters in the trenches of daily life. From the difficulties of fitting in prayer time to the impact that lots of babies have on intimacy to the unique challenges of the single life, each author digs deep into the issues that real Catholic women think about. With the tone of a group of gals gathered around a bottle of wine, it is sure to be a hit with all Catholic women, whether they need practical tips in areas in which they struggle, words of encouragement, or just a bit of entertainment after a long day.

Although the book will be released in March, preorders are available at Amazon today. You can get in line after me. ๐Ÿ˜‰


Especially for Kids: “Little Angels” DVD

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I first heard about Roma Downey’s (did you know she was Catholic?) new DVD Little Angels at CatholicMom.com. The site has background info and is also running a contest to win an autographed copy of the DVD. (I entered!)
Here is the introduction from LittleAngels.com.

Discover the joy of learning and friendship with a heavenly new collection! From Executive Producer Roma Downey (“Touched by an Angel”) and Writer Phil Lollar (“Adventures in Odyssey”) comes the much-anticipated faith-based educational series, LITTLE ANGELS, soaring onto DVD from Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.
LITTLE ANGELS is an animated DVD series created exclusively for preschool-aged children to teach not only practical learning skills, like ABCs and 1,2,3s, but also to introduce them to the spiritual, moral and ethical principles of the Bible. Of course, we think it’s terrific! (We might be biased…) But don’t just take our word for it – for the first time in their organization’s history, MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers) has awarded a Seal-of-Approval to LITTLE ANGELS.

And here is a sneak peek. ๐Ÿ™‚ It looks cute and educational!


CFCA: Our first letter from Abigal


A couple months ago I posted about Abigal, the little girl in Mexico that we sponsored through Christian Foundation for Children & Aging (CFCA). Yesterday we received our first letter from her and I was so touched.


Abigal tells us about her life and her family but it is the closing paragraph that brought tears to my eyes. The translation reads:

“I promise I will make a big effort in the school so that you become proud of me. I will pray every day for you from now on so that God takes care of you and pours blessings upon you wherever you are. I have to close for now. I love you.
Your sponsored friend,
Abigal”

This little girl living in poverty is praying for me, that I will be blessed. It’s amazing. I am trying to help out by giving to someone else and instead I am the one who receives the blessings. God is so good.
This sponsorship has also been a great family project! We pray for Abigal and her family every night during our decade-rosary. Bella especially has a soft spot for Abigal since she doesn’t have a sister of her own. She writes to her and draws her pictures.

I am hoping to save enough money to sponsor a second child in the future – a little boy that our boys can write to.
There are many, many more kids looking for sponsors, as well as teens and elderly. Advent will be here before you know it. As you prepare to welcome the Christ Child in your heart, prayerfully consider welcoming one of these children into your heart as well.

“Truly, I saw to you, as you do it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me.”

Here are just a few kids waiting for someone to help them!

cf_evelyn.jpg Evelyn from Guatemala (Age: 4) Evelyn is very dynamic at school. She lives with her mother and father and her little brother. Evelyn’s mother is a housewife. Her father sells firewood by the meter, but his income is seasonal. Evelyn’s family is very interested in moving forward. Talents and pastimes: Drawing and listening to music; Jobs at home: Sweeping in the yard of the home; Favorite school subjects: Natural science; Birthday: January 9, 2007 (CH673993)

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cf_niyati.jpgNiyati from India (Age: 5) Niyati is well-behaved. She lives with her parents and her younger brother and sister. Niyati has humble parents who struggle to provide an education to their children. Her father is a laborer. He works hard, but earns a low income. Niyati’s mother is a housewife. She tries to encourage her children to get an education to improve their lives. Talents and pastimes: Sketching; Jobs at home: Studying; Favorite school subjects: English; Birthday: March 13, 2006 (CH681981)

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cf_eli.jpg Eliana from Bolivia (Age: 12) Eliana is a quiet child who likes to help others. She lives with her parents and has three siblings. The family moved to their current location with the hope of better opportunities. Eliana’s mother stays home to look after the household. Her father earns a meager income by cutting sugarcane and performing a variety of odd jobs. A Hope for a Family sponsorship can make this family’s dreams for a more promising future attainable. Talents and pastimes: Dancing, singing, playing; Jobs at home: Making the bed, washing the dishes; Favorite school subjects: Mathematics; Birthday: April 17, 1999 (CH643300)

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cf_mikel.jpg Mikel from Costa Rica (Age: 2) Mikel is a joyful and playful boy. He likes to eat a lot. He lives with his mother and grandmother. Mikel’s mother stays home to look after him. She is struggling to get ahead with her son. The family lives off the grandmother’s pension. Although it is a steady source of income, it is not enough to cover the family’s basic needs. Talents and pastimes: Crawling; Birthday: August 20, 2009 (CH652202)

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cf_santiago.jpg Santiago from Mexico (Age: 3) Santiago is very energetic and he likes doing new things. He lives with his mother and father. As a couple, Santiago’s parents trust each other and get along well. They spend time with their child. Santiago’s mother is a housewife. His father does upholstery work, but his job is not fixed. Talents and pastimes:
Making puzzles; Jobs at home: Sweeping and cleaning; Birthday: May 6, 2008 (CH672537)

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cf_ronald.jpg Ronald from Kenya (Age: 6) Ronald loves drawing and playing with his age mates. He lives in a single, rented room with his mother and father and three siblings. Both parents are tailors and they try their best to meet the family needs, especially school fees. Their income is not always enough. Talents and pastimes: Playing football and with toys; Jobs at home: Running errands; Favorite school subjects: Mathematics and English; Birthday:
January 13, 2005 (CH676845)

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cf_remart.jpg Remart from the Philippines (Age: 10) Remart is shy yet playful. His ambition is to become an electrician. Remart lives with his parents and his three siblings. His family lives together in a small, rented house. Remart’s mother does laundry for others. His father is a plumber. Remart’s father works hard to provide a better life for his children. Talents and pastimes: Singing; Jobs at home: Babysitting his younger brother; Favorite school subjects: Mathematics; Birthday: May 27, 2001 (CH673199)

To specifically sponsor one of these children, go to this CFCA link and in the “Help me Find” section to the right, put in the child’s country and name. Their profile should pop up. You can also call CFCA at 800.875.6564.
God will bless you for your generosity and sacrifice.


Perspicacity: Hope For A Family – Carla’s Family

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I posted a few weeks back about CFCA (Christian Foundation for Children and Aging) our sponsored child Abi. Yesterday I received an email from Paula K. who recently visited Guatemala. She is trying to find a CFCA sponsor for a little girl named Carla who lives in Guatemala. Please read her story and see if God is asking you to open your heart to bettering her life and the life of her family.
UPDATE: Here is a comment from Paula:

Bobbi, I can’t thank you enough for sharing this on your blog. In sharing Carla’s story, I have found it challenging to convey that feeling I got in Guatemala among the sponsored children and families, and getting a very true sense of how an expenditure that to a U.S. family can be relatively small (a trip for 5 to Mcdonald’s, say), can truly transform the most basic elements of a whole family’s life. If any of your readers have questions, please feel free to contact me directly! Although my sign in has my daughter’s email address, the best is opuswsk@aol.com. Thanks everyone!!!


NFP: Hidden Hardships, Secret Struggles

nfp_1WARNING: More NFP talk. Skip it if it’s not your thing. ๐Ÿ˜‰

I was searching through the Faith & Family blog in the NFP section to see if there was a post with readers tips on how to manage long periods of abstinence during irregular cycles. I didn’t find one but I did find this article from the magazine published back in 2009. I vaguely remember reading it back then but it didn’t make much of an impression because we weren’t having a big problem with the abstinence back then. But now that we are still going for weeks of carrying this cross, it meant a lot more to me this time around.

Some of the suggestions are moot points because I don’t do or already do the things mentioned but others were good reminders to me. And I must say that some points like sharing my struggle and “appealing to his protective side” really works in for us, knowing that we are in this together. Here is the article so you can read it for yourself.

Couples who use natural family planning (NFP) are happier, more satisfied, and more faithful than their contracepting peers. Each month, they enjoy a deliriously romantic “honeymoon effect.” Men spend fertile phases chastely courting their wives, who eagerly await the end of the day on infertile days so that they can joyously give of themselves to their husbands.
Just like at your house, right?
Or maybe it’s more like this: You love each other, but your intimate life is kind of a mess. You refuse contraception out of obedience to Church teaching, and you truly believe that natural family planning is better than those awful chemicals everyone else uses anyway. You’re doing everything right, but having no fun at all. Your husband is angry, you’re resentful, and the whole thing has somehow become an aching knot of misunderstandings and hurt feelings. When you read the glowing reports of the marriage-building benefits of natural family planning, they oยญ nly make you laugh.
How natural is that?
Well, the truth is that the marriage-building benefits of remaining faithful to Church teaching are real. They are attainable. It’s just that you have to work hard to get them.
I asked some everyday Catholic husbands to take off their rosy pre-Cana glasses and answer this question: How can wives make NFP easier for their husbands?
What they told me might surprise you. As this is a sensitive topic, the men who have contributed to this article have done so anonymously. Here are some of their suggestions …

***How to Help — On Days of Abstinence***

Don’t mock the poor guy.

If your husband is suffering, don’t mock or shrug off his difficulty. What kind of communication from him would you hate to lose? Talking? Hugging? Hearing him speak your name? Now imagine being teased or belittled for missing it. Don’t do that to your husband, even if you can’t see why it’s so hard for him to abstain.
One man explained: “It is the perceived indifference to our plight, and even mockery of it, that cuts men to the quick.”
Another husband observed: “One of the huge problems for a guy is that, if his wife can’t understand and respect his struggle in this particular sacrifice, then who can? Society and the media are bombarding us with ridicule of men and the ways they commonly receive love, while telling us all to value and respect women’s needs. In answer to this dilemma, guys are simply told to ‘deal with it’ in private, or to ‘offer it up’ in Catholic circles.”
And another: “The times I’ve done the best are when my wife has shared with me how proud she is that I am trying, how much it means to her that I love her enough to do this, and that she gets how tough it is. Times when she is empathetic to my struggle. Those efforts on her part are an incredible source of strength.”

Spend time together.

This is a skill. Cultivating other kinds of intimacy can actually make abstaining less painful, as well as enhancing sex.
Plan a date: dinner, a movie, or a TV night. Or turn off the TV (and all other screens), and work together, go for a walk together, or have tea together. You don’t even have to leave the house, as long you spend some time focused only on each other, without the kids, a few times a week. Plan ahead to make sure it happens. Hiding from one another, even with good intentions, is poison for a marriage.
One husband said:
“I have to say that the only success I’ve had is when instead of pulling away, I enter the breach and work on the relationship and intimacy just when the tension is highest. Does this make times of abstinence easy? Well, yes and no. It was still challenging, but all the bitterness and angst I usually associate with abstinence was mostly missing. And the closeness I was feeling to my wife, well that was a really wonderful thing. The tension of abstaining was still there fairly regularly, but the intimacy from other sources made the pill sweet rather than bitter to swallow.”

Talk about your own desire, and ask for his help.

When you are abstaining, let him know that you wish you could be intimate (and some husbands say it’s okay to exaggerate a bit); and appeal to his protective side.
One husband explained: “Emotionally, it’s reassuring to know that you’re interested. Also, it can serve to deflect a man’s thoughts from himself to how he can help his wife. To be honest, abstaining is no pleasure, but how much more difficult must it be that the period of abstaining, for a woman, comes when her body is most geared up. Turning a man’s thoughts from self-pity to self-donation can only be for the good.”

Don’t tempt him.
Don’t start something you’re not willing to finish. Find out what really gets him going, and don’t do that, if you’re supposed to be abstaining. It may help to make a list together of dos and don’ts.

***How to Help — When Abstinence Is Over***

Just do it.
I know, you’re tired. But give the guy a break — he’s your husband, not some jerk at a bar. Even if it wasn’t in your plans, be intimate as often as you can on the available part of the month. He shouldn’t have to beg.
It may seem like it’s only exhaustion or hormonal problems that are squelching your drive, but a lack of physical desire can also come from emotional distress. If you work to improve the relationship, your desire may increase.

Prepare.
Don’t pick infertile days for your most enormous, tiring projects. On days where you can be intimate, let your days be geared toward the evening and your husband. As much as possible, plan your schedule accordingly, and don’t stay up too late the night before.
Some men appreciate a clean bedroom, and many women get in the mood when they feel beautiful. Have your hair done, get a manicure, or (dare I say it?) buy some fancy underwear. Whatever makes you feel beautiful and desirable!

***How to Help — Anytime***

Spruce up.

None of the men I talked to said, “I wish my wife were younger and thinner.” But they did say they like it when their wives dress up a little for them. If you put on earrings or a clean shirt to go out shopping, then you can do it for your husband on a regular basis, too.
Do nice things for him.
Maybe you feel like you already do nice things. You cook for his tastes, you wash his clothes, you bear his children … what more could he want?
Well, he wants to know that you like him.
Find out what makes your husband happy, and do something extra for him each day. Cook something special, give him a sweet note or unexpected compliment, or jump up to get him seconds on coffee. When he gets home, stop what you’re doing and make a fuss over him. It’s not June Cleaver; it’s love.

Communicate clearly.
Let him know as early as you can what the daily fertility status is. If you have determined that use of natural family planning is God’s will for your marriage right now, take it seriously! Chart flawlessly. If your beloved is going to be annoyed, let it be at the system, not at you.

Pray together.
Pray together every day, and state your intentions out loud. This can be one of the most breathtakingly intimate activities of your married life. If you regularly pray together for a more chaste and joyful intimate life, then God will surely give it to you.
And privately pray for your husband’s happiness daily. You may find yourself becoming the answer to that prayer.

But Enough About Him
What about you? You’re the one who has to chart, menstruate, gestate, and lactate, not to mention clean the bathroom. Never mind helping your husband — what about the ways he can make natural family planning easier for you?
Well, there are two reasons that list isn’t here.
The first reason is that I’m pretty sure you already have your own list. If there is something you want your husband to know, for heaven’s sake tell him; he can’t read your mind. Often, it’s misunderstandings that cause trouble, not malice. It’s okay to insist on having some conversations about how your husband can help you, as long as you’re ready to hear his side, too.
The second reason to focus more on what you can do to help is the “unitive” part of your love life. That’s no hype: It’s what intimacy is about, and it’s just as important as making babies.
Your husband’s problems are your problems, and his happiness will likely lead to your happiness, maybe in unexpected ways. Bad sex comes from bad relationships, not vice versa.
Even if you aren’t getting along, and you wish he would treat you better, force yourself to take the first step — treat him a little better, and see where it leads.
Try presenting it to him this way: “I want to have a better, more active intimate life with you. Can we go over these ideas?”
Hand him this article and ask him which suggestions sound good. Maybe none will, but at least you will be talking about it. Each man is unique, but every couple is the same in one way — they really must talk about these things.

Hope, Not Hype
The truth is, all the hype about natural family planning is true. The benefits are real; it’s just that they’re not inevitable. It takes practice, and it takes effort to gain them. You probably will get an awful lot wrong before you get it all right. But if you do make the effort, you will be rewarded with a stronger marriage, a more satisfying intimate life, and a whole lot of help toward greater holiness along the way.
And that is something I’d like to see mentioned in the natural family planning manuals.
Simcha Fisher lives with her husband and seven children in Marlยญ borough, New Hampshire, where they confront the mystery of life daily.
If you regularly pray for a more chaste and joyful intimate life, then God will surely give it to you.