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Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

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She Intimidates Me…

August 2, 2017 · In: family, motherhood, personal journey, womanhood

 

It was probably the fourth time in the last year that I’ve heard the phrase—by four different women. Man, what did I do to deserve this? Of course, we could laugh it off now, but as she told me how much I use to intimidate her, I’ll admit, I felt a bit of offense. Me? Intimidating?

There’s always that chance to ask her why. Why did she think I was so intimidating? Why did she feel she couldn’t approach me and stood back in a distance silently judging me? Now, she’s loving all of this girl right here but, not always.

You just seem like you have it all together. 

You’re so confident.

You know who you are in Christ, and that’s intimidating for a woman like me.

I’ve heard it all. I get it often…

Confidence isn’t something that is easily understood. On one hand you’re a leader, someone people respect and look up to. Someone that people can count on. On the other hand, you’re judged…called obscene words that normally start with a giant “B”, and you’re inapproachable.

There’s a fine line between confidence, arrogance, and insecurity.

But, if we’re being honest, I don’t have it all together…at all.

If we’re being honest, this girl you think I am, she intimidates me too.

I’m messy.

I have 100 things that have to get done and I often find that I choose the things that bring me joy or feelings of accomplishments first.

I hate my body—my chin, my arms, my mom stomach, my jiggles everywhere.

I typed in “mom” stomach to make myself feel better, realizing that it’s just an excuse I use.

I’m insecure. I’m terrified people won’t like me when I meet them. First impressions are everything, right?

I care a little too much about what people think about me, and I’m one of the  biggest introverts that you’ll ever meet, and yet, I won’t seem much like one.

I can be mean, but I can be the kindest person you’ll ever meet.

I can be selfish, immature, and rude.

But I can be loving, a saving grace, and eloquent.

I can be bad arse but I’m scared to death.

And I miss the girl I use to be. But, that girl has come a long way in life. A long, long way.

A man once told me, when I was young and naive, that I wasn’t like “all the other girls”. That I was cool. That I was like “one of the guys”. I smirked because, back then, it seemed rare. But the reality is that I was exactly like every other girl.

I was imperfect. Imperfectly beautiful.

There’s nothing quite like embracing imperfection.

There’s nothing quite like owning it.

There’s nothing quite as satisfying as knowing absolutely nothing about anything and yet determined to know anything about everything.

And this is her…this is me…

I’m confident because I’ve been less than confident.

I’m confident because I’ve been walked all over, taken advantage of, and whispered sweet nothings to, with nothing but heartache in return.

I’m confident because I know what I want in life, who I want in life, and how I want life to be. Because I’ve had the rest…the other…the settled for.

I’m confident because not a single person in this world is going to be able to tell you all the things you need to hear that you are…not until you believe them yourself. 

I’m confident because I’m insecure. I’m shaking on the inside but I can’t dare let it show on the outside because, well, I know how that turns out…and it goes absolutely no where.

I’m confident…but I am exactly like every other woman out there….

I’m vulnerable, insecure, contagiously zealous, unknowingly jealous, comparative, and sassy.

But I am kind, I am quiet, and I am undoubtedly in love with the only Being in the entire universe who knows the depths of my heart, the good and the ugly, and what my confidence really is—Jesus.

If not for Him, and knowing my worth within His hands of warmth and love, I’d wear my insecurities on my sleeve, and my heart would certainly be one of stone.

I’m a hard worker, and I don’t complain about it. You don’t get anywhere in life by complaining about your chores, your aches, your drama, or your reluctance. I’ve learned that the hard way . . . I’ve learned it early in life.

This woman you think I am…she scares me. This is so true.

The confident woman that I actually am?…she wants to love you, laugh with you, be goofy with you.

She wants the fun and chaos, but she wants the depth of meaningful conversations.

She hates small talk and no, it doesn’t mean she knows more than you—it simply means she feels deeply, thinks widely, and her horizons are limitless.

This woman, she is confident. But never, ever, forget that she is exactly like you. When you see other women like her, don’t fight her. Relate to her. Love on her. Be proud of her.

She’s just a woman trying to make it in a sea of people, with little hands that tug on her shirt, dirt under her fingernails, and the world, literally, at her fingertips. Sometimes she just shows less of her insecurities and imperfections because she knows that if she shows it, then she’ll believe it.

She intimidates me…she intimidates you…and it’s only because we wish we were exactly like her…the thought of her.

The reality, however, is that we are exactly her…at exactly the right time…in exactly the right space. And the rest of the time, when we’re a mess of runny mascara, broken hearts, lost battles, and spilled sippy cup chaos…in the middle of imperfection… Well, that’s where my sweet Jesus takes the front seat, and whispers softly, “you are the daughter of a King…you are imperfectly beautiful”

Embrace it, sweet girl. And next time, when you see her—that friend, that co-worker, that blogger—don’t judge her….smile at her. Because after the confidence, she’s a puddle of mush just waiting for the next saving grace to scoop her up and love her to pieces. She’s waiting for the reminder that she’s just like everyone else…she’s exactly like you…and you are exactly like her.

Womanhood is tricky, but I promise, womanhood takes a village . . .

 

By: Amy K. Fewell · In: family, motherhood, personal journey, womanhood · Tagged: motherhood, self growth, she intimidates me, womanhood

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I'm Amy. I love organic food but I love cookies too I love Jesus and His grace. I believe broken people make the biggest impact in the world when they share their stories. I believe in stories, and I'm sharing mine.

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@amy.fewell

The healer’s kitchen is very simple. We know that The healer’s kitchen is very simple. We know that Jesus is the ultimate healer, and yet we know that these simple herbs and remedies that sit on our shelves and counters also make us capable of healing through Yahweh’s creation. It’s a beautiful symbiotic relationship. 

We are not new age or “witchy”. In fact, with every herb we harvest and remedy we hand out, we thank God for how He created us. And we know that all we are really doing is helping Him bring His creation back into homeostasis. I always chuckle when I see people praise “natural” doctors that rarely recommend anything natural. But then look at you weird when you are literally using nature.

The healer is different. The one who partners with “the Restorer of all things”—Yahweh. We look at the environment around us. We look at the food we eat. We evaluate the water we drink, air we breathe, people we fellowship with, and emotional stresses. Because we know that stress plays a major role on health and disease in the body. 

Years ago, a friend of mine said “well you and I understand, because we are community healers.” And it hit me. I like that word. I like what it conveys. We are healers of the land, soil, family unit, culture, food system—all while being directed by the Holy Spirit, Jesus, THE Healer. 

And it is beautiful. And it is humbling. It is to be revered.

The other night during fellowship, we were processing the potential spiritual gift of healing being present in one of our group members, and someone said “He chose you to be a healer”. In HIM. Another example, but in the spiritual way through equipping and edifying.

Uniquely, when you’re busy healing your life, you come to a point where you don’t need many remedies or protocols on hand for yourself anymore. But recently a friend came over and asked if I had something that she needed immediately, and I didn’t. And I thought to myself “it shouldn’t be this way, I must get back to the way it was, ready to help heal at anytime.” 

So this week I’ve been taking time to do exactly that. Because God has called me—you and I, even—to a unique space and calling. Physically, spiritually, and agricultu
Early this morning I had a dream. In the dream the Early this morning I had a dream. In the dream there were various people, but the significant part of it was me holding my baby on my hip while praying for other people. It seemed chaotic and yet not. 

But as I began to look around in the dream, I kept hearing (while simultaneously saying) “it is compassion that makes the difference.” 

This morning I started reading the book of Mark. And in the very first chapter I read exactly this—Jesus was moved to such compassion for people. It wasn’t a task. It wasn’t a check list. It wasn’t a method. It wasn’t a doctrine or theology assignment. It was compassion and authority and His power. 

That’s it. 

My prayer today, and everyday, is this—Lord, give me compassion for Your people, the body of Christ, and sinners. Give me compassion beyond comprehension, that can only come from You. And the discernment of hearts, so I know when to move on.
This one is for the leaders in marketplace and min This one is for the leaders in marketplace and ministry…

Something I wish someone had told me earlier in leadership—

You can love people deeply and still not be available to everyone constantly. Those two things are not in conflict. Learning the difference might be the thing that saves your ministry, your business, and your sanity all at once.

The further you go in leadership, the more people will want from you. And because you genuinely care, you will feel the pull to say yes. Every time. To everyone. They are good things, but they aren’t always your assignment.

And it will slowly hollow you out if you don’t realize this. 

There is a version of being helpful that is actually a form of neglecting your own assignment. When you are so deep in everyone else’s lane that your own lane goes untended—that is not generosity. That is a boundary problem dressed up as a virtue.

You need leadership friends. But a leadership friendship is not a leadership merger. You can sharpen each other without steering each other. You cannot want it more than they want it. You cannot build it for them. If you try, you will burn out doing someone else’s work while your own sits waiting.

And there are people who will—consciously or not—try to make you their permanent wing man. Until the line between your assignment and theirs disappears. You are allowed to put that down.

Protecting your time is not selfishness. It is stewardship.

Not everyone who wants your time deserves your time. And not everyone who needs a leader needs you to be theirs.

Protect the assignment. Guard the gate. Lead well from your own house first.

Overflow from your cup into your home. Create circles just like Jesus did—the Father, the three, the 12, the rest. 🤍
There are days when I don’t feel like any of it is There are days when I don’t feel like any of it is working. Days when the animals get out and the kitchen is a wreck and a child is crying and an email goes unanswered and dinner is burned and I sit down at the end of it all and think—what am I even doing? Is any of this adding up to anything?

I see you, girl. We are wives who are also visionaries. Mothers who are also builders. Homemakers who are also entrepreneurs. We hold the baby on the hip, the business in the mind, the home in the hands, the marriage in the heart. And we do it mostly without enough sleep.

But the enemy knows that if he can get you to quit, he wins on every front at once.

So he whispers that you’re failing as a mother because you’re building something. That you’re neglecting your business because you’re tending your home. That you’re too much and not enough, simultaneously, always. He is strategic and he is a liar, and I need you to hear that today with everything in you.

Proverbs 31 was a portrait of a woman who kept going. She rose while it was still dark. She worked with willing hands. She considered a field and bought it. She opened her arms to the poor and her mouth with wisdom. But she was not perfect, she was faithful. And she knew when to rest.

That is your inheritance. That is your calling. 

God did not give you a vision for your home, your family, and your work so that you would abandon it the moment it got heavy. He gave it to you because He knew you could carry it—not in your own strength, but in His. The weight you feel right now is not a sign that you’re failing. It is a sign that you are doing something that matters.

Don’t you dare quit.

Not on your marriage when it gets hard. Not on your children when you feel invisible. Not on your home when it feels like chaos instead of sanctuary. Not on the business and mission God put in your bones. 

Every faithful, unglamorous, unremarkable day you show up is a seed going into the ground. And seeds that go into the ground do not stay there forever.

Your harvest is coming.

Keep your hands to the plow, friend. Heaven is watching, and it is not unimpressed.
If you have a sourdough starter sitting on your co If you have a sourdough starter sitting on your counter, chances are you also have one thing piling up faster than you'd like—sourdough discard.

For many homesteaders, throwing discard away feels wasteful. After all, we work hard to cultivate our starters and steward what we have. That's exactly why this Easy Sourdough Pizza Crust Recipe has become a staple in our kitchen.

And here's the best part—it doesn't require an all-day fermentation process.

This homemade sourdough pizza crust comes together quickly, uses simple pantry ingredients, and transforms ordinary pizza night into something that tastes like it came from a wood-fired bakery.

The crust is crispy on the outside, soft and chewy on the inside, and carries that subtle sourdough flavor that makes every bite better than store-bought dough. Whether you're feeding a large family, hosting friends, or simply looking for another practical way to use your sourdough starter, this recipe delivers every single time.

One of the things I love most about homestead cooking is learning how to stretch ingredients further. Sourdough isn't just for bread. It's for pancakes, biscuits, crackers, pizza crust, and countless other recipes that help reduce waste while creating nourishing food from scratch.

In a world that constantly pushes convenience, there's something deeply satisfying about gathering around a homemade meal made with ingredients you've cared for yourself. Pizza night becomes more than dinner—it becomes a tradition.

If you've been searching for:
✔️ An easy sourdough pizza crust recipe
✔️ A practical sourdough discard recipe
✔️ Homemade pizza dough without commercial yeast
✔️ Simple homestead recipes for busy families
✔️ Ways to use extra sourdough starter

Then you'll want to save this recipe for later.

Trust me—once you make pizza this way, it's hard to go back.

🍕 Comment PIZZA and I'll send the recipe directly to your inbox!

Have you ever made pizza crust with sourdough starter? Tell me your favorite toppings below!

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