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you are enough

September 13, 2016 Whitney Saxon

These days, on ideal mornings, I wake up with Chris when it's still dark and our street is sleepy. We do our quiet time in the big, comfy chairs at the front of our house, keeping all of the lights off except a dim lamp in the sunroom. It's warm and slow and happy as I journal and think about how much coffee I'm going to drink.

After that, I start writing. Lately, I've been working on a book I hope to publish (<-SCARY feeling, vulnerable admission), I submitted an article to Relevant (<-SCARY, vulnerable feeling, again) and have been trying to free write as much as I can. I am getting back to an old feeling, a feeling I felt for years and pushed down as my schedule got too busy and the paycheck got too comfortable. It's the feeling of: I have to write, I have to get this out of my head right now. 

The mornings feel sacred when I go about them this way. They feel protected, creative and precious, as I know that someday slow mornings won't be within reach. They haven't been for the last six years and I'm savoring them right now, knowing this chapter is finite. 

After my third cup of coffee and every thought has been put somewhere on paper, I start on tasks: coaching, monetizing my blog, networking, tracking my goals, etc. 

Yes. That is the ideal morning. 

However, sometimes, I get derailed. That moment is when, right after my precious quiet time, I allow myself to blog stalk. Because, in that moment, I start comparing. I realize other people are doing more things, being more creative, have better images, better recipes, better words, better ideas...

Before I know it, I am convinced everyone has better everything and I made a huge mistake quitting my job and should probably start looking for a new one ASAP. 

Comparison is the thief of joy, yes. It is also the thief of creativity. 

Comparison gets its strength from its evil cousin, scarcity. They work hand in hand to taunt us, haunt us and convince us that there isn't enough in the world to go around; that we're in competition instead of collaboration.

It's the little voice in your head that makes you mad, not happy for a friend who gets engaged.
It's the pit in your stomach when your friend tells you she's pregnant and you've been trying so, so hard to get there.
It's the annoyance you feel when a friend loses (healthy) weight when you just can't seem to do it.
It's the anger you feel when your coworker gets promoted and you've been working just.as.hard.

It's the belief that this world is running out of happiness and someone else getting theirs means it might be too late for you. 

For my birthday, I asked for a cuff that says "enough". I wanted it to serve as a reminder to me: I am enough. My writing is enough. This season is enough. There is enough in the world to go around. 

When I'm typing and it catches my eye, I'm reminded of all of these things.

In a comical twist, both my parents and sister got me the bracelet, so I have two. I literally received more enough cuffs than I needed. More than enough! 

So, I'm wearing them both. They speak truth into my heart and remind me: there is more than enough to go around. Enough men, enough babies, enough promotions, enough weight loss.

There is enough for me and there is enough for you.

Tags love yourself, just thinking
6 Comments

good friday reads & listens

September 9, 2016 Whitney Saxon

Happy Friday, friends!

On Wednesday night, Chris surprised me with a trip to the beach for my 30th. This morning, we're en route to Rosemary Beach, which is where my family has gone on vacation for years. I'm so excited to show him around our favorite little coffee shops, running routes and, oh, that glorious, glorious Emerald Coast. 

Our car is loaded with Spike Ball, tennis rackets, inner tubes and everything you'd imagine a family of five to have. Minus, of course, the children. 

//

I've been writing a lot more lately and, as I've done it, I've noticed my creative pores widening. This means more output, which is good. However, it also means the things I'm taking in have an ability to infiltrate with greater ease and stick inside my head a little more. I'm realizing I have to be intentional about what I read, understanding that my spongey brain is craving examples, ideas and mentors. 

With that, I wanted to share some of the exceptional, yoga-for-your-brain-and-soul type things I've been taking in. 

Listening: 

The Power of Vulnerability by BrenĂ© Brown (your first Audible is free! But, also, worth ev.er.y penny)
Magic Lessons by Elizabeth Gilbert
Dear Sugar Radio by Cheryl Strayed and Steve Almond

Reading:

Allison Fallon's blog
Present Over Perfect by Shauna Niequist (Confession: I actually have not started it yet. But I am 100% comfortable recommending it anyway. I believe in Shauna :))
Little Things & Curiosities by Laura Marie Meyers (she just had a baby so the updates aren't as frequent, but, if you haven't discovered her blog, enjoy years of beautiful writing!)

What else should I be reading or listening to? Have a wonderful summerfall weekend!

Tags friday, just thinking
4 Comments

feeling grown but not grown up

September 7, 2016 Whitney Saxon

The last two weeks have felt like dog years.

Time is standing slow, the dog days of summer inching forward, leaving me in awe as I realize it has only been 2.5 weeks since I left work. 

I feel far from my once daily routine. Packing a gym bag and work clothes and a lunch, driving the long commute and sitting in a corporate desk feel like ages ago. The 5.5 years I did them feel like a lifetime and another lifetime ago all at once. 

A lot of people asked me if I felt 30 on my birthday, which is one of those funny things people always ask you when you turn another year. Do you feel 25? I remember people asking me a few years ago. Do you ever really feel older? I remember replying as I wondered if you ever, ever feel as old as you are.

This year, though, when people asked me if I felt 30, I told them I did.

30 is a round, big number that sounds old if I think about it too hard. But then, I also feel like I did a lot of living in 29. I got married and quit my job, which were two major heart-changing, transformative leaps that left me feeling older. 

I'm realizing that maybe I don't feel like a grown up, but I feel more grown.

I feel awake and alive and certain. I feel scared and overwhelmed on some days.  And that's because I'm making hard decisions that align with the life I want to live, which means saying no to old patterns and easy routines.

These days feel surreal and I know, just like many of our most transformative phases, that they'll be etched into my mind for years to come. I'll laugh about the time when I wasn't making hardly any money. I'll smile about the way I relied on Chris. I'll remember how certain I felt that the things I was doing were a little crazy. 

But I'll remember that, for the first time in a long time, I knew I was moving in the direction I wanted to go.

Tags just thinking, love your life
Comment

// 30 //

September 5, 2016 Whitney Saxon

Today, I turn 30.

I'm saying goodbye to 20 - a transformative, beautiful, hard, scary, painful, joyful decade. If you had told me at 21, when I started this blog while sitting in the intern room at Atlanta magazine, that I would carry it through the rest of the decade, transforming it as I grew up, making internet friends and learning so much from the hard and beautiful parts of sharing your life online with others, I am not sure I would have believed it. 

I thought about reflecting on my 20s today, but then I realized that this blog is really just that. It's a journey of what happens when a 21-year-old turns into a 30-year-old while sharing a lot of it online. I am so grateful to many, many of you who have stuck by me through this process.

These days, as I begin to work with more and more 20-somethings, with the hope of guiding them through a decade that can be hard, but so very beautiful, I find myself yearning to champion them, just as you all did for me. 

In 2012, right after I turned 26, I drafted an email to myself with 2013 goals. I was at one of my lower points in my 20s - unsure as to why so many of my friends had found husbands, careers they loved and seemed to have it so much more together than me. Unsure as to why I felt like I was hustling so hard and not really getting anywhere. 

As one of my three goals for 2013, I wanted to be engaged to or dating my husband by the end of the year. I smile now as I read that email. Who was I to think I could control that? :) It also hurts my heart a little bit as I read it, knowing how frustrated I felt at the time. Knowing how lonely I felt. 

I'd like to think that now, at 30, I know better than to think I can predict what a year or decade will hold. Sometimes, maybe I do. Sometimes, I probably still think I can control it. 

But, alas, here is what I hope 30 could hold for me:

1. I hope we create a slower life.

We've only just begun exploring the idea of slowing down - from reducing commitments and travel, to spending more time alone, we're trying it out from a lot of angles. We're making more room for play, which I think will be a helpful habit to learn for when we start a family and life is even more hectic. 

My 20s were marked by a lot of hustling. From being constantly overly committed, to struggling with perfectionism and trying to please everyone around me, I was often doing a little jig trying to manage it all. As I enter this new decade, I find myself saying: This is who I am and this is the best I can do. I hope we stretch this attitude across the furthest planes of our lives.

2. I hope we put down roots.

Chris and I are pretty open about the fact that we don't see ourselves in Atlanta longterm. Are we against it? Not really. But we also don't feel called to stay for the long haul. 

I hope this decade reveals to us where we'll be putting down roots. And then, I hope we cultivate community. I hope we meet our neighbors, join bible studies, get involved in our town and grow deep friendships. Atlanta has brought us beautiful friendships and I hope we carry them with us, too, reminding us constantly of what this decade held.

We've spent a lot of time saying well, we don't know how long we'll be here. In a way, I think this has kept me from going all in. There was a constant feeling of we could leave tomorrow if we really wanted to. I think this allows us to keep from being vulnerable to a place. Admitting that you're going all in on a city, hoping to develop real relationships and pour into it can be scary. I hope we're brave enough to figure out where we'll be and go all in. 

3. I hope we start a family.

I don't know when and I don't know how many babies we will get to have. But I hope my 30s mean me holding some little Saxon babes in my arms.

4. I hope we seek adventure and take risks.

Recently, we've spent a lot of time defining what adventure means for us. It's quitting my job. It could be a move to a new town. It could be staying. It could be another trip to Uganda. There is bravery is so many different scenarios - I hope we pursue these adventures whole heartedly, unafraid to take some risks. 

5. I hope we turn toward one another & pursue the Lord.

Most of all, I hope we grow deeper in our love for each other and pursue the Lord whole heartedly. I hope we are unafraid and unwavering.

So, that's just a little bit of what I hope this new decade brings. And now? It's time to go eat some cake. But mostly ice cream :)

Tags love your life, love your relationship, love you 30s
4 Comments
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Hi! I'm Whitney. I'm so glad you're here! I'm somewhat obsessed with helping women believe they are enough and they're not alone in this world. 

I founded The Letter Project in October 2017 to help spread this message a little further.

Thanks for reading! I believe in you.


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