Time with Friends

Do you feel the need to have regular time with friends but aren’t sure how to make that happen? Sometimes we tend to be ships passing in the night with friends we know and love. Solid friendships can withstand those times, but they do fail to enrich our lives during that same time.

How can we intentionally keep the blessings of friendship part of our daily lives?

  • It may help to make a list. There are some people we want to prioritize, and the process of thinking that through and writing down names can help our focus. Also, this list will work well during your personal prayer time if you would like to regularly pray for each one.
  • As usual, schedule time. Maybe you need two hours a week dedicated for coffee or playdate or writing letters. Maybe you need to set a daily reminder (or alarm) to text encouragement to someone. Make whatever fits best for you part of your calendar so that you have a reminder and time blocked to do it.
  • Reach out. Make it happen. Don’t wait for someone to invite you to go for a walk — ask away. It may be awkward to start a new friendship, but both of you will be glad and richer after you get going. Be the hero!
    Check in on friends regularly. You can stay in touch whether it’s your turn or not.
  • Love freely. Your schedules will not always mesh, but that isn’t a personal slight. We’ve all said something that landed the wrong way; give the benefit of the doubt in conversations. Share your time and grace and encouragement as freely as you would like to receive it.
  • Combine chores. Meal prep can be done together. You don’t need coffeeshop coffee to chat — laundry can be folded between sips at home too. You want to walk daily, but you can call loved ones while you walk. Get creative and use what you have.

Being intentional in this will be rewarding. Enjoy each moment!

Consider: “Living Well, Spending Less”

Living Well, Spending Less by Ruth Soukup is a book that speaks more to living than spending, so don’t expect in-depth budget analysis, but hopefully we also spend more time living than spending.  Here are two excerpts from this practical book:

While I’d like to think this book can change your life, the reality is that true change will come only through prayer. The upcoming chapters of this book will contain more practical tips than you will probably know what to do with. We’ll talk about choosing contentment, finding our sweet spots, setting goals, becoming more disciplined, clearing our lives of clutter, establishing a budget, saving money on food, keeping a clean house, and learning to appreciate all the things that money can’t buy. I truly hope those ideas will help and encourage you to lead a simpler, happier, and more productive life. But I can tell you right now that nothing else in this book will mean anything without continual, wholehearted, and passionate prayer.

If we aren’t perfectly clear about what is most important in our lies, it is easy to be swayed by anything that comes our way.

These books are set here as possibilities for you to explore. Posts and links are not endorsements or paid publicity.