Friday, December 2, 2011

Easy, fun, inexpensive, handmade Christmas Gifts

Well today I have been looking on how to make soap and I came across some great recepies for inexpensive and yet personal gifts. I love scrubs! here are some interesting and  can be great gifts!

Solid Brown Sugar Scrub

4 oz. melted melt and pour soap
8 oz. grapeseed oil or Avocado Oil
3-4 oz. brown sugar
1/2 oz. honey
Fragrance oils or essential oils (20 drops)
Mix your grapeseed oil, honey and melted melt and pour soap together. Add the brown sugar and mix together with hands. You can add your fragrance or essential oils at any point during the mixing process. Divvy up into wide-mouthed jars. Wait 24 to 48 hours for the mixture to harden into a semi-solid mixture.

How about some perfume.
Solid perfume is fun and easy to make and is a wonderful idea for a personal, hand-crafted gift! You'll want some stylish little butter pots to hold your creations and Bramble Berry, Inc. has a terrific selection. To make your solid perfume, follow these directions:
For a 9 oz. batch (which will fill about 36 pots), you would use, by weight:
2 oz. Beeswax
3 oz. Shea Butter
4 oz. Olive Oil
.5 to 1 oz Fragrance Oil of choice
Melt all fixed oils together, and add fragrance oil to melted oils. Pour mixture into small jars or twist-up tubes and sell as a solid perfume!

This recipe reminds me of one year my family gave out corranders as Christmas gifts. Here is another idea.

Scented Stones

Great as room fresheners! You will need:
One ceramic or glass bowl,
1/2 cup flour (do not use self-rising flour)
1/4 cup salt,
1/2 tablespoon alum (available in drug stores),
1 tablespoon essential or fragrance oil,
2/3 cup boiling water and
food coloring (optional).

In ceramic or glass bowl, thoroughly mix dry ingredients.
Add essential oil and boiling water.
NOTE: scent will be strong, but will fade slightly when pastilles dry.
For colored dough, blend in food coloring one drop at a time until desired shade is achieved.
Blend ingredients to form a ball.
Working with a small amount at a time, roll dough between palms of hands to form small balls.
Note: cover unused dough to keep it from drying out.
Allow pastilles to dry.


Thursday, December 1, 2011

The beginnings!

I have over the last year loved learning about how to make your own style cheap but also natural. Who wants to put tons of chemicals on your face and hair if it can be avoided and maybe even cheaper?! coming up on the Christmas season, I want to look my best for all those picture to come.
My first product is makeup remover. It can get expensive and so here is an easy way to remove and hydrate your skin at the same time.

Ingredients:
  • witch hazel
  • olive oil
These two simple ingredients make a wonderful eye makeup remover. In a small container fill it 3/4 of the way full with witch-hazel. Despite the name, witch-hazel is quite harmless and can be easily found at any health food store. Then put about 3-4 Tablespoons of olive oil in the container.
For use shake well before applying with a cotton ball. The Olive oil will help remove the oil residue on your skin and leave it with healthy oils. "likes remove likes" The witch-hazel works as a toner and cleanser.

I also use witch-hazel as a toner.
Ingredients
  • witch-hazel
  • tea tree oil
  • lavender oil 
The witch-hazel is the toner, this helps in clarifying your skin. The tea tree oil is used as a cleanser, like for acne or any blemishes. Tea tree oil is amazing. I will do a blog post about it later. The lavender oil helps to stop any irritation or redness that might occur. Lavender is known for its soothing qualities.

Friday, February 4, 2011

I would like to start today in a prayer. Dear God I thank you for this opportunity today. I pray that it would be you who speaks to us today. God I thank you for Jesus and for the forgiveness of our sins. Thank you for this day let me glorify you in this speech today. In Jesus Name Amen.

“Forgiven, Beloved, Hidden in Christ, Made in the Image of the Giver of Life, Righteous and Holy, Reborn and Remade, Accepted and Worthy this is our new name.” These are lyrics from Jason Gray's song I Am New.

These are powerful words. Do you believe them? Do we live like we believe them? Or do we tend to think of ourselves only as sinners? I think far to often as Christians we focus on the sins in our lives rather than what Jesus is doing in our lives. We know that we are sinful in Romans 3:10b its says “no one is righteous no not one.” Then how does God see us? In Ezekiel 36:26 its says “I will give you a new heart with new and right desires, and will put a new spirit in you. I will take out your stony heart of sin and give you a new, obedient heart.” This verse shows how the Lord is changing us. He sees us as more than the sins that we commit.

Tenth Avenue North says this so well in their song, You Are More. The song says “ you are more than the choices that you've made you are more than the sum of your past mistakes you are more that the problems you create.” It goes on to say “its not about what you've done, but what's been done for you, this is not about where you've been but what the brokenness brings you to, its even not about what you feel, but what he felt to forgive you and he felt to make you loved.”
Isn't that freeing? We can do absolutely nothing about it, Jesus chose to die for us and he chose to love us while we were still sinners! As stated in Romans 5:8.

In Colossians 3:10 it says that “you have been clothed with a brand-new nature that is continually being renewed as you learn more about Christ, who created this new nature within you.” Then in Ephesians 4:24 says “you must display a new nature because you are a new person, created in God's likeness-- righteous, holy, and true.”This is who you are if you have confessed with your mouth that Jesus IS Lord and believed in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved, Romans 10:9.
Now I would like to go back to one of my original questions. Do we live like we believe the words of Jason Gray's song? I know I far to often don't live like I am his Beloved or that I am Worthy of the new name I have been given. I look at the people around me to define who I am. What are people saying about me? Is that how you define yourself? Do you look in the mirror every morning letting it tell you who you are?
If we are sons and daughters of the Most High King wouldn't that change how you look at things. I know it would for me. As I wrote this speech I felt convicted and encouraged. I was convicted because I have not believed that I have been made new in Christ. Also I have let others thing than Christ define who I am.
I was encouraged by God's faithfulness and that his love never fails us. His faithfulness is shown in Genesis 28:15b, “I will never leave you until I have done what I have promised.” God was talking to Abraham but the same apples to us today.
What has he promised to those who have believed? Phillipians 1:6 says “he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of the Lord Jesus.”
In a song sung by Barlow Girl, it talks about how in many cases we let a mirror define who we are. This is not how we should be defined, instead we should let Jesus define who we are. When he looks at us, he sees beauty beyond compare.
It says in 1 Corinthians 12:4-7 “There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work. Now to each one the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the common good.” We all have an important role in God's eyes, He is no respecter of persons. We all have a role in God's plan, all we have to do is to be willing to accept what he has for us.

There is so much that God has planned for us. In Jeremiah 29:11 it says “I know the plans I have for you, plans for welfare, and not for calamity, to give you a future and a hope.” In Ephesians2:10 that “you are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus which God has prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” Let us live our lives to the fullest potential that God has for you. Remember that you are Forgiven, Beloved, hidden in Christ, made in the Image of the Giver of Life, Righteous and Holy, Reborn and Remade, Accepted and Worthy, this is your new name

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

This is an amazing story, it again puts into perspective what Christ has done for us. That He has washed our sins away and taken all our pain and given us a new life through Him if we but believe that Jesus is the Son of God and Lord of our lives.. hope you enjoy it too. I heard it from my math teacher last month.

The Ragman


I saw a sight so strange and experienced something so amazing that it is hard for me to explain it. If you can give me a few minutes, I’ll do my best to describe it to you.

Before dawn one Friday morning I noticed a young man, handsome and strong, walking through the back alleys of the city. He was pulling an old cart filled with clothes both bright and new. As he pulled the cart he was calling out in a clear, powerful voice: “Rags! Rags! New rags for old! I take your tired rags!”

The air was foul in these dark side streets, tainted by the filth and trash that living unleashes on the world. And yet as the man called out, the air became tinged with the faint scent of cleanliness, as though the breeze that carried the sweet music of his voice also carried with it the hope and promise of a cleansing rain and a purifying wind.

“Rags! New rags for old! I take your tired rags! Rags!” The man continued to move through the dim light of early morning, his strong voice echoing from building to building and street to street.

“Now, this is a curious thing,” I thought to myself, for the man stood six- feet-four and his arms were like tree limbs, hard and muscular. His eyes flashed with intelligence. What was he doing here, in a city that had no need for such a useless profession. Who recycled rags anymore? Could he find no better job than this, to be a ragman in the heart of a city? Driven by my curiosity, I followed him. And I wasn’t disappointed.

Soon the Ragman saw a woman sitting on the porch of a small house. She was crying into a handkerchief, wracked with sobs as she shed a thousand tears. Her body language said it all as she seemed folded in on herself, shoulders down, back slumped forward, knees and elbows making a sad X. She had no hope. Her heart was breaking. Her body may have been alive, but her soul wanted to die.

The Ragman stopped his cart. Quietly he walked over to the woman, stepping round empty beer cans and old newspapers, dead toys and broken furniture. “Give me your rag,” he said gently as he knelt beside her, “and I’ll give you another.” The woman looked up into his powerful, compassionate eyes and saw something there that paused her tears. The Ragman slipped the handkerchief from her hand and used it one last time to dry away the flow of tears from her face. Never taking his eyes from hers, he laid across her palm a linen cloth so clean and new that it shined. She looked down at the new cloth and then back again to the eyes of man who had given it to her. The Ragman slowly leaned forward and kissed the woman’s forehead and then turned and walked back to his cart.

As he began to pull his cart again, the Ragman did a strange thing: he put her old, used stained handkerchief to his own face…and then he began to weep. He sobbed as grievously as she had done, his shoulders shaking as the tears flowed down his face in a torrent of grief.

But looking back to the woman on the porch I could see that she was left without a tear. She sat with her shoulders high and a look of wonder on her face.

“This is amazing,” I thought to myself, and I followed the sobbing Ragman. Like a curious child who cannot turn away from a mystery, I watched the Ragman from a distance.

“Rags! Rags! New rags for old!” rang forth his voice. Though it was still strong, it also shook with emotion as he wept. “Rags! I take your old rags! Rags!”

In a little while, the sky showed gray behind the rooftops. It was light enough to make out the shredded curtains and damaged blinds that hung in dark windows. The Ragman came upon a girl sitting curbside whose head was wrapped in a bandage, eyes as vacant as the windows around her. Blood soaked her bandage and a single line of blood ran down her cheek.

The Ragman paused and turned his weeping eyes upon this empty, injured child. Reaching into his cart, he withdrew from it a beautiful yellow hat and walked towards the girl. “Give me your rag,” he said softly, “and I’ll give you mine.” The child did not move and could only gaze at him vacantly while he loosened the bandage, removed it from her head, and tied it to his own instead. I gasped at what I saw: with the bandage went the wound. The girl’s head was left unblemished, while the Ragman’s head began to bleed. He set the hat on the girl’s head and suddenly her eyes took on an understanding and intelligence that had been missing before. She placed her hand to the side of her head where the bandage had covered the wound that was no longer there. Smiling in wonder, she watched as the Ragman rose unsteadily to his feet and moved back to his cart.

“Rag! Rags! I take old rags!” cried out the sobbing, bleeding Ragman. “New rags for old! Rags!” With his powerful arms pulling the cart, he continued on his way. He seemed to be moving faster now with an urgency I hadn’t noticed before.

He stopped again in front of a man who was leaning against a telephone pole. “Are you going to work?” he asked. The man shook his head. The Ragman pressed him: “Do you have a job?”

The man looked him up and down, making note of the Ragman’s weeping eyes and bleeding head before replying. “Are you crazy?” he sneered as he leaned away from the poll, revealing that the right sleeve of his jacket was flat, the cuff stuffed into the pocket. He had no arm.

“Give me your jacket,” said the Ragman firmly, “and I’ll give you mine.” Such quiet authority in his voice! The one-armed man looked into the other’s eyes and then slowly took off his jacket. So did the Ragman. I rubbed my eyes in disbelief as I trembled at what I saw: the Ragman’s arm stayed in its sleeve, and when the other put on the Ragman’s jacket he had two good arms, strong as tree limbs. The Ragman was left with one. “Go to work,” he said as he moved back to his cart.

Struggling to make due with his one arm, the Ragman began to pull his cart again, this time much faster and with greater urgency. He came upon an unconscious old drunk lying beneath an army blanket, hunched, wizened and sick. He took that blanket and wrapped it round himself, but for the drunk he left new clothes.

And now I had to run to keep up with the Ragman. He was weeping uncontrollably, and bleeding freely from the forehead. He struggled to pull his cart with one arm while stumbling from drunkenness, falling again and again, exhausted, old, and sick. Yet he moved with terrible speed nearly sprinting through the alleys of the city covering block after block and mile upon mile.

I wept to see the changes in this man. I hurt to see his sorrow and ached each time I saw him stumble and fall. When he began to move through the industrial area of the city, away from the houses and apartments, I wanted to stop following and turn away from my grief, to leave it behind and go back to my life. But I could not. I needed to see this sad, amazing story to its end. Who was this Ragman? Why had he done what nobody else would have done? Where he was going in such a hurry? How would it end?

The once strong Ragman was now old and frail, weeping and bleeding, staggering and falling, his body wracked with pain, sorrow and disease. I watched as he came to an old abandoned lot that was filled with piles of trash, old furniture, and the rusted out shells of cars and construction equipment. He moved among the garbage pits and piles of human refuse and finally climbed to the top of a small hill made from the trash of a thousand lives. He struggled to pull his cart and its sad, pathetic burden. With tormented labor he cleared a little space on that hill.

With a deep sigh, he slowly made a bed from the contents of his cart and lay down on it. He pillowed his head on a handkerchief and a jacket. He covered his old, aching bones with an army blanket. His body shook under the load of its injuries and pain and disease. His eyes wept and the wound under his bandage continued to bleed. With one last, deep sigh, he closed his eyes and died.

Oh, how I cried to witness that death! I sat down in an old, abandoned car and wailed and mourned as one who has no hope. I wept because I had come to love the Ragman. As I had followed him, I had watched him work wonders and change lives so profoundly that it didn’t seem fair that he was gone. He had taken those things that were soiled and damaged beyond repair and had replaced them with the new and the whole. He had offered hope to the damaged and lost of the city.

But if the Ragman was gone, then my hope was gone as well. I felt such an overwhelming sense of grief and loss that I remained in the private seclusion of the rusted out car and sobbed myself to sleep. I did not know – how could I know — that I slept through Friday night and Saturday and on through Saturday night as well.

But then, on Sunday morning, I was awakened by a violence that shook me to the core of my being. Light – pure, hard, insistent light – slammed against my tear-stained face and demanded that I awake. When I was finally able to open my eyes, I blinked against the light and squinted in the direction of the pile of trash where the Ragman’s body had been. As I looked, I saw the last and the first wonder of all. The Ragman was there, yes! But he was no longer dead. He was alive! There he stood, folding the old army blanket carefully and laying it atop the neatly arranged handkerchief and jacket. Besides the scar on his forehead, there was no other evidence of what he had previously taken upon himself. There was no sign of sorrow or age, no evidence of illness or deformity. His body was whole and strong and all the rags that he had gathered shined for cleanliness.

I wept to see him again. When I thought that hope had died along with Ragman, I had abandoned any hope for my own life. And yet there he stood, healthy and whole. Climbing from my shelter I moved toward the Ragman, trembling from what I had seen and because of what I knew I needed to do. Walking to him with my head lowered, I spoke my name to him with shame. Looking up into his clear, loving, compassionate eyes I spoke with yearning in my voice, “Rags. Please take my tired rags and replace them with new ones.”

And he did just that. Taking the old, tired rags of my existence that covered the griefs and wounds of a life sadly lived, he replaced them with the new clothes of a life spent following Him. He put new rags on me and I am now a reflection of the hope he offers to us all.

The Ragman.

The Christ.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

very quick update, but hey better than nothing, right?

well it has been a REALLY long time since i have been on here.. I can't cover all of that in one night.. its not even possible.. so i am just going to start with now and hopefully it won't be a every six months occurence.
Tonight we got back from Bend and buttermilk was laying down and we all thought she had up and died on us...but she didn't \:) she's still kicking for a little while longer..lol I am not sure if I can put this all into word but God has really just been working on my heart. telling me to wait for His timing, because it is perfect. Oh, then I read this book Power of Prayer by E.M. Bounds (I think you all should read it! very encouraging and challenging!) I have lost all my creativeness for the night. If you really want to know how I am doing you should just email, call or talk to me..lol..

Thursday, June 18, 2009

It has been FOREVER since i have posted. its not because i have no life but it more because i have such a full life right now that i don't have time to post. i finished school at RHS about two weeks ago but i still have one more week of school. so that's pretty exciting but i won't have a big brake because I am doing summer school! :) which is math for 4 hours a week and then Spanish once a week so life is pretty full and i need to figure out a job this summer. anyone have an idear? oh and then i have to study for my permit test in a month tomorrow.. i can not believe my birthday is only a month away!!!!!!! that is exciting. this Saturday heather is going with the middle schooler's from our church to smith rock. and i get to go as a councillor which is weird.. lol is feels like i suddenly feel old. oh well... i think i will be done for now.. hope everyone is having a spectacular summer!!

Sunday, May 31, 2009

my random life...as never told..lol jk

well life has been pretty much normal.. well at least as normal as a funky house can be...lol yesterday we went to help out a friend move and she needed us to pull out mustard out of the pastures.. i am so SORE!! i don't even know how that could happen... but i'm having trouble walking.. :) lol i will post more asap..lol when school gets out