Molly Davis's Blog, page 17
November 20, 2020
No Laughing Matter
A merry heart doeth good like a medicine: but a broken spirit drieth the bones.
— Provers 17:22 KJV
Today, I feel great, as in awesome. I haven’t felt this good, this upbeat, this happy, in, well, in since I can’t remember when. And it’s not because vaccines for the Coronavirus have gotten FDA approval and are being widely distributed. It isn’t because the current president has graciously conceded defeat and authorized a peaceful transfer of power. Nor is it because I can hug my family and friends with abandon, gather together around a table to share a meal, or see fewer wrinkles when I look in the mirror.
None of those things have happened.
And it’s not because the Seattle Seahawks beat the Arizona Cardinals Thursday night. Which did happen. (Well, maybe that helped just a little.)
It took me awhile to figure out why I woke up on the bright side of the bed, which isn’t how I normally roll. It turned out to be pretty simple.
It was laughter. Laughter was the magic sauce that brightened my day and lightened my load.
Last night just before crawling into bed I received a text from one of our daughters about our four and a half month old grand-boy. His bedtime routine includes feeding him just before he goes to bed. Last night he stopped nursing, looked up at his mom and just started laughing. And couldn’t quit. He just laughed, and laughed, and laughed some more. He was , she texted, like a little person who just found out how good laughing feels.
Drifting off to sleep, just thinking about that little happy-to-his-toes-boy laughing, made me laugh.
This morning over my first cup of coffee in the pre-dawn dark on our porch, I watched a Taylor Calmus, aka dudedad, story.
It.
Was.
Hilarious.
I couldn’t stop laughing. (Do yourself a favor and watch it— maybe more than once.)
Yesterday ended with laughter. Today started with it. Psychology Today suggests that laughter can boost our immune system and our mood, lower anxiety, help us release tension, and foster resilience. Sounds like good medicine to me.
Life is no laughing matter right now.
Which is exactly why laughing matters more than ever.

Photo by Rodolfo Quirós from Pexels
November 19, 2020
Whose Business Is It?
The day I created #ThePostcardProject, I felt excited and hopeful. Energized, I got to work bringing what felt like an inspired idea to life.
The day I decided to launch #ThePostcardProject, I started to feel silly and uncertain, anxious and afraid, self-conscious and small.
What if nobody thought it was a good idea?
What if no one else got on board, and I was the only one to actually do it?
What if #ThePostcardProject never got any traction? Never went anywhere? Never got noticed?
The more I marinated in those familiar feelings that show up whenever it’s time to actually put something I’ve created into the world, the more stymied I became. It was just about then that God leaned in close and whispered, “That’s none of your business Molly.” In other words, all I had to do was get about my business.
Byron Katie reminds us that there are only three kinds of business in the world—my business, your business, and God’s business. Bringing an idea to life and sharing it with the world is my business. What anyone else does with that idea is their business. And where it goes from here, is God’s business.
We never know what will happen when we offer something to the world. That’s none our business. Offering what we have to share is.
Do you have an idea waiting to come to life?
Then please, get about your business.

November 16, 2020
#ThePostcardProject

On November 6th, I posted a blog titled Dear Us.
I wrote it as a way of passing the time as the election results were still coming in. I knew that regardless of the outcome, there is serious work to be done if we are to redeem our democracy. And yes, it is work to be done by our elected officials, but if there is any hope of success, it is work that must be done by all of us.
In that blog I imagined sending a handwritten postcard to every member of Congress, calling on them to stop blaming those across the proverbial aisle and start working together for the common good. Because that is what I want them to do. I believe the majority of Americans want them to do that too.
Walking down our road the next morning my husband said, “Mol, we should do it. We should handwrite postcards to all 535 members of Congress. I also think you should do something with this idea.”
And with those words, #ThePostcardProject was born.
The idea is to get as many people as possible, from all across the country and the political spectrum to send a clear message to Congress. Stop blaming each other and start working together to build a country that works for all of us. Period.
Today I am inviting you to not only join me in my efforts, but to invite as many others as you can to join in as well. Ask friends. Ask family. Ask neighbors and co-workers, teachers and students, athletic teams and faith communities. Ask any and everyone you can.
The time to come together as a country is now, and #ThePostcardProject is one way to start.
Will you join me?
Learn More About #ThePostcardProject
November 10, 2020
Fruitful
Let’s just put this one to rest—life is hard. No two ways about it. While it isn’t necessarily hard all the time or every day, over the long haul there is plenty of hard to go around.
For example:
The other night Tom and I went to bed at odds with each other. That doesn’t happen very often, but when it does, I hate it. We both do. Neither of us had the capacity to deal with it, which meant we had to sleep with it. As I turned over, and closed my eyes, a thought occurred to me. May it be fruitful.
The next morning on the porch in the cold pre-dawn darkness we sat with our coffee, trying to make sense of what had happened. It was a hard, emotional, and painful conversation. It wasn’t fun. I cried a lot. It took listening on both of our parts, and eventually we found our way back to each other.
The fruit of that hard thing was that we discovered how to be better partners to each other.
Life is harder than ever right now. For me, and for the people I love, and most of the time there isn’t much we can do for one another other than to listen and bear witness to the hard. That, and pray that whatever it is will bear good fruit. That we will lean into the pain, or the fear, or the conflict, or the anxiety, or the anger, or the loneliness, or the grief, and turn it into something fruitful.
Nothing else makes sense.
Because the only thing that makes something hard even harder is when it doesn’t bear fruit.
November 9, 2020
Waiting Is Hard Work
I’m not much of a rafter. In fact, if I never raft again that would be ok with me.
The few times that I have put on my life jacked, climbed into a raft, and headed down a river, one of the most interesting parts of the experience is when preparing to run another set of rapids. An experienced rafter holds the raft back, paddling and maneuvering against the current to get the boat into the best position to successfully navigate the water ahead. The challenge comes from the constant pull of the current trying to carry the raft forward.
It is a waiting game that takes patience, skill, and hard work. The payoff is that when the time comes to head back into the rapids, those in the raft are ready for the ride.
We are in the waiting game of our lives right now.
The pandemic, which feels like it might never end, is only heating up as the temperatures outside go down. As much as we all long to gather around tables again with friends and families, worship together in our houses of worship, cheer for our favorite teams in packed stadiums, send our children back to school free and unencumbered, frequent our favorite bars and restaurants, join together to honor and celebrate important events, and hug with abandon, we must wait.
The final results of a contentious election, while clear to the many, are being muddied and held up by the few. As much as we’d like to put this all behind us and get on with the hard work of building a country that works for all of us, we must wait.
The economy is at a standstill while our need to support ourselves and our families marches on. As much as we would like for everyone to return to work and get back to business, we must wait.
Waiting can feel like we are doing nothing.
Don’t fall for that notion.
Waiting is not meant to be passive.
Waiting is active, and it takes patience, skill, and hard work.
Like preparing to run the rapids, now is the time to maneuver against the current in order to put ourselves in the best position to navigate the waters ahead. Rapids we’ve never encountered before await us, and now is the time to ready ourselves for the ride.
Learn what can only be learned during this time of waiting.
Discover what can only be discovered during this time of waiting.
Develop the skills that can only be developed during this time of waiting.
When tempted to let go and get back into the flow of life again, let’s hold fast. Let’s do the hard work of waiting. The payoff is that when the time comes to head back into the rapids, we will be ready for the ride.
November 8, 2020
Changing Lanes
It might be an overstatement to say that feelings drive my car, but not much of one.
If life were a three lane highway, it is safe to say that I live most of mine in the feeling lane. Yes, I can switch lanes and drive in the thinking or doing lanes, but my default is always feelings first, everything else later. This can make for a tumultuous ride, and at no time has this been more evident than this turbulent year.
When my emotions are of what are typically considered the positive ones, my energy is good. I’m motivated to get things done, can find causes for hope even when things look bleak, and am pretty damn good company to those around me. When overtaken by the darker ones, not so much.
There are three lanes for a reason, and I need to make use of all of them. To lean into thinking and step into doing.
We all have our preferred lane, and can easily fall into our typical patterns of thinking, feeling, or doing. When we find ourselves on auto-pilot, maybe it’s time to change lanes.
November 6, 2020
Dear Us,
Tiring of waiting for the election results to become official, I started composing an open letter to Congress.
It was more like an open postcard.
Dear Elected Officials,
Stop blaming the other side and get to work building a country that works for all of us. And if you won’t do that, shame on you.
But before I can send that postcard to our elected officials, I’d better mail one to myself. And while I’m at it, to every other person who calls this broken country of ours home.
If we don’t stop blaming the other side and get to work building a country that works for all of us, then shame on us.
Because It isn’t just up to them, it’s up to all of us.

October 30, 2020
Grace Y'all
We are going to need a lot of grace y’all.
One way or another, we are in for a wild ride after this election. And by all accounts, it could get pretty ugly out there. Much of what happens post election is out of our control. The one thing that is completely under our control, the only thing that ever really is, is our response.
Let’s not contribute to the ugliness. Let’s make a pact with ourselves to bring the best of who we are to each other, and to each and every day. Because that is what it’s going to take, no matter how things shake out.
Like I said, we’re going to need a lot of grace.
Let it be so.
Amen.
October 28, 2020
What Fun?
“So, what are you doing for fun these days?”
That was the question I posed to a friend not too long ago
She didn’t have an immediate answer. To buy herself a little time she turned the tables on me.
“Well, what are you doing for fun these days?”
I didn’t have a ready answer either.
This was not good.
It’s a funny thing about fun.
Just when we need it the most, as in now, it seems the hardest fo find.
We are in for a long haul my friends, and the only way we are going to make it through, and do the hard work required of us, is to find ways to lighten our hearts, lift our spirits, and look for moments of lighthearted pleasure.
Not someday.
Now.
Not when the pandemic is over.
Now.
Not when things change for the better.
Now.
Gracie-the-chocolate labradoodle gets it. She can turn anything into a moment ofenjoyment, amusement, or lighthearted pleasure, especially if there is a ball involved. But if there isn’t, she grabs the nearest stick and races in circles. If there isn’t a stick, she races in circles anyway. Head held high, a twinkle in her eye, she is having a blast right in the middle of this messed up world. She doesn’t wait until all the chores are done, there is a lull in her schedule, the election is over, or there is a vaccine available. She simply sees the possibility of fun all around her and grabs hold of it.
If she can do it, so can we.
So, what you are doing for fun these days?

Photo by Scott Webb from Pexels
October 26, 2020
What Aren't You Saying?
Imagine what would happen if our thought bubbles were visible to others. It might not be pretty.
Before we heave sighs of relief that they aren’t, let’s consider what might happen if they were. I’m not talking about our snarky thoughts, or the mean spirited, sarcastic words we would never utter out loud, but love to shout behind the closed doors of our mind. I’m talking about the other ones. The thoughts and feelings that we work so hard to keep hidden might be precisely the ones that need to be brought out into the open.
What aren’t you saying?
Whatever it is, it might be what will lead to the real conversation. The one that will result in deeper understanding and closer connection. The one that will help heal wounds, mend fences, develop courage, deepen trust, and strengthen relationships.
What aren’t you saying?
Whatever it is, it might be what needs to be spoken out lout and within our own earshot. The words that will help us separate fact from fiction, loosen fear’s grip, empower us to ask for help, and shed light on our next right steps.
What aren’t you saying?
Whatever it is, it might be exactly what needs to be said. And heard.

(With gratitude to Dane Anthony for showing me the power behind this question)
Photo by Miguel Á. Padriñán from Pexels


