Shelly A. Faust

  • Home
  • About Shelly
  • Speaking
  • Free Graphics

Winners Announced!

April 9, 2014 by shellyafaust@gmail.com

Congratulations

Hey friends! Just a quick update with the names of our winners!

  • Week One – Tracy!
  • Week Two – Tracey Malone!

Congratulations, girls! Look for an email from Laurie soon! :)

And thank you, Laurie Wallin for your generosity in giving away two signed copies of your new book!

And friends, if you didn’t win, but want to get your own copy of Why Your Weirdness is Wonderful (and you do, trust me!), here are some helpful links:

Connect with Laurie

  • Website
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Find your own copy of Why Your Weirdness is Wonderful on Amazon.

If you missed out on our author interview with Laurie and my thoughts about the book, you can read them here

  • Week 1 – Why Your Weirdness is Wonderful (author interview)
  • Week 2 – Why I’m Weird and Why It’s Okay

Here’s one more excerpt for you!

Sometimes I wonder what God is thinking. (OK, lots of times.) When prayer seems to fall fruitless to the floor, when personal battles rage unabated, and I’m frustrated with something in myself, it’s easy to wonder whether God’s thinking includes me at all. When I’m in one of those modes—those “Nobody loves me. I’m no good. Might as well curl up and succumb to the bag of chips” frames of mind—I often end up going on one of my nature strolls.

 Enter the humble pine cone. So easily kicked to the side of the street as I walk, it reveals a pattern that’s repeated in one way or another just about everywhere within the universe. A number-based pattern of spirals named for the mathematician who first discovered them, these Fibonacci numbers form repetitive patterns in much of nature—from galaxies to ocean waves, from pine cones to the contour of your ear.

 That’s right, we carry that design motif too. On our bodies. Inside them. And it’s all around us. Because we’re part of God’s grand design. You and I were worth fashioning. Our lives, our work, and our presence here matter more than we can imagine.

 Looking at that pine cone, I realize something: it isn’t sitting along the side of the road crying because it isn’t good enough. So why are we crying? Why are we struggling with insecurity, with the sense that we don’t have strengths or that our quirks might just swallow them whole?

 When we look at our lives, full of the mundane in many ways, we must not miss the elegance of their design. Because everything about us has something to do with our purpose: The music we love. The things that freak us out. Our favorite hobbies. Our jobs. What we think about. The classes we took during college. The summer job that had nothing to do with anything (or so we thought). And even that weirdo we dated in high school.

 It all has a point! It’s part of God’s grand design.

 If you’re like me, you might be thinking, Yeah, right! How exactly could all those parts of my life be related? And how could they possibly matter to real life now?

 Great questions. To those, I’ll ask a few back:

  1. What words might appropriately describe your life over time?
  2. What experiences have you had, and what have you gained from them?
  3. What ideas and experiences inspire you?

 During a recent season in which I felt a bit lost in my focus for work and writing, I answered these questions myself. To my surprise, words and themes were repeated again and again:coach, teacher, inspirer, supporter. In my role as the oldest sibling growing up. As a teacher’s assistant in middle school. As swim captain in high school and a coach afterward. As a resident advisor, helping college freshmen find their fit on campus. As a middle school teacher. Even my college photography studio job had a place in my bigger purpose, as I created settings that reflected and supported each subject’s uniqueness.

 My quirks, preferences, strengths and challenges, it became clear, had all been one huge becoming. Each revealed parts of God’s design in me―for me―and it all mattered. Just as every part matters in yours. 

 When life gets intense, or we lose sight of the value in our experiences, strengths or quirks, asking the three questions above―or simply noticing the design in nature around us―can get us back on track toward embracing the wonderful in our weirdness.

Once again, congratulations to our winners! You hit the jackpot!! :)

xoxo

Share on FacebookPin on PinterestTweet about this on TwitterEmail this to someoneShare on Google+

Filed Under: Book Reviews/Author Interviews, Updates

Sign up to receive Shelly’s blog posts in your email.

Hey y'all! I'm Shelly :) Read More…

Recent Posts

  • Get Rid Of It
  • The Majesty and the Miracles
  • The Tomb Is Empty!
  • I Can Imagine The Morning After Jesus Was Crucified
  • I’m sorry, Jesus.

Join the conversation on Facebook

Twitter

Tweets by @shellyfaust

Find me on Pinterest

  • Follow Me on Pinterest
She Speaks Graduate Proverbs 31 Ministries Online Bible Studies I am a member of COMPEL Training

Search

Categories

  • A New Season
  • Book Reviews/Author Interviews
  • Encouragement
  • Faith
  • Free Stuff
  • Guest Posts
  • Loving Others
  • Over-planned & Unfulfilled
  • Parenting
  • Prayer
  • Scriptures
  • Simple Holy
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates

Archives

  • January 2020
  • November 2019
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • August 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • April 2015
  • February 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2025 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in