The best podcasts, books, and articles of 2021

I love a good wrap up, so here you’ll find a list of some favorite listens and reads from the past year:

Best Books: For the person who loves a character driven story: Jayber Crow and/or Hannah Coulter. For the person trying to understand Gen Z and cancel culture: The Coddling of the American Mind. For those who love historical fiction: The Island of Sea Women. For someone limping along in their faith: The Good & Beautiful God. For the person who wants to know if God still speaks (He does!): Hearing God (Disclaimer: I’ve only read two chapters of the last book, for grad school, but they were life-changing. You can bet I’ll be finishing this one!)

*I read a lot of so-so fiction in 2021. Next year I’m aiming to stay away from the new, buzzworthy book lists and looking for winners that are tried and true. But if you want to see my full list of books this year, including some of my seminary reads, it’s here.

Best Podcasts: Deconstruction & Doubt with A.J. Swoboda, Dirty Water on Ear Hustle, Bridgetown’s “What is the Gospel?” series, The Decision of My Life, Pantsuit Politics’ The Wellness Industry’s Influence, Beth Moore Didn’t Expect Us to be Us, and God is that Really You? by Love Thy Neighborhood

Best Articles: J.D. Vance and the Great Challenge of Christian Malice / The Great, (Fake) Child Sex-Trafficking Epidemic / Practicing Resurrection in Grave Clothes / The Evangelical Church is Breaking Apart / Clarity vs. Trust

What Worked For Me in 2021: Orange Theory! (It turns out, I like friendly competition and HIIT training. I’m still surprised about it.) / Hiking with friends, hiking as a family, and hiking solo / Winter Saturday mornings talking about Jesus with friends / Weekday lunch dates with Jonathan / A LOT of alone time…this introvert is thriving with kids in school! ;)

Best Moments: Adventures in Alaska, North Carolina and Kansas all by myself / Watching Luke ride a bike for the first time / Teaching our kids to ski in Ashland / Getting vaccinated—all of us! / Lots of clean cancer scans / Seeing my Iron Well girls again after three years / Reading Harry Potter to Owen / Watching Anna swim / Jonathan making partner and celebrating him

Sending you love and peace on the last weeks of 2021 as we inch towards the new year. There’s still much to worry and question, if we let ourselves, but our Helper leads the way and is never surprised. In Him I continue to find consistent joy despite the circumstances. I pray this joy over you and yours today.

Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

It's not fair: thoughts on getting vaccinated and wrestling with my privilege

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Before his hair fell out in clumps, I remember what the nurses said:

No plane flights.

No movie theatres.

No church.

No school.

And anyone who wants to spend time with your son needs a flu shot.

Avoiding movie theaters was easy enough. Withdrawing from school and skipping church was painful. But it was the instruction about flu shots that felt incredibly uncomfortable because it involved navigating other people’s choices.

When someone goes through chemotherapy they usually become immunocompromised which simply means their body has a much harder time fighting off illness and disease. For some children and adults, the body can even become neutropenic which greatly increases the risk of life-threatening infections. Regardless of whether the patient has received a flu shot, their best chance at not getting sick is staying home and making sure the people who come into their house have been vaccinated.

I remember the awkward texts. My husband, Jonathan, is also a cancer survivor. He usually did the communicating.

“Want to come over for dinner?” they’d ask.

“Are you all vaccinated?” he’d reply.

Many of our friends and family were accommodating, but a fair share had concerns about the flu vaccine and chose to ask if it was really necessary. Several decided to not vaccinate but keep their distance. We all have to make decisions that feel right for us, so I understood. When our kids were babies we spaced their vaccines apart and even delayed a few because I was hesitant about the mass load they were expected to receive the first year of life. I believe in scientific research but I also know the human body can be mysterious. I’d admit that we don’t know all the side effects of vaccines so I tried to not let others' medical decisions bother me. It wasn’t their fault my kid was sick.

But, needless to say, with two cancer survivors in my house we are TEAM VACCINE. Without vaccines, my family would have been at much, much greater risk of severe complications during cancer treatment and I am grateful for the medical advances that, while not perfect, have helped keep my family out of the emergency room.

The thing with cancer is that there are often some very significant scars that go beyond the literal “shark bite” line on my son’s abdomen. Being cured doesn’t mean you’re well. There are the emotional scars that have left us in counseling. There are the stiff joints and fingers. The high blood pressure. There was the hospital stay in January because of complications from a prior surgery. And that’s just our son’s issues. Jonathan has his own side effects that we’re still discovering, managing and grieving. I cannot imagine dealing with COVID on top of everything else.

While I intellectually know that each week my family’s risk of exposure goes down because of other’s decisions to get vaccinated, I would be lying if I didn’t say that it’s been hard for me to watch Jonathan wait for his turn. He’s gone to the office every day since the shutdown began but he’s not considered an essential worker. Across the street from his office, a drive-thru site is now vaccinating carloads of university students, who are eligible because they are student workers at a school that still doesn’t have in-person classes or gatherings. While I know college students’  weekend social behavior puts them at risk to our community, I can’t help but think of the families who’ve been quarantining for several years while their kids with acute myeloid leukemia go through treatment. It doesn’t seem fair that these parents aren’t yet eligible for a vaccine. When it comes to this vaccine, “earning it” shouldn’t be part of the vocabulary, and yet, no doubt there are people who have suffered more than others during the last year.

When I really push into my own emotions, “it’s not fair” is what I keep coming back to.

Lots of people are getting the vaccine who don’t really need it. Some even have “vaccine guilt.” There are people who are eligible but don’t feel like they should be, and those who aren’t eligible but have worked the system. There are those who aren’t technically childcare workers (but work at a church that runs a childcare center!) or don’t technically work in a classroom (but have their student teaching certificate!) or don’t technically work as a waiter (but they’re friends with a restaurant manager!) 

I’ve learned that so long as I can find an available appointment (it took me a week of compulsive refreshing to find one for my husband), I too can join the vaccinated masses if I write down that I’m a teacher. After all, I am technically homeschooling my kids, right? And I’m not unhealthy but technically my kids are…doesn’t that count for something? My friend Sarah currently manages a large vaccine site and she put it this way: we’re talking about the inherent nonsense of the technicalities. If you want more technical thoughts on this topic, check out Scientific American’s article, COVID Vaccine Rollout Pits Fairness Against Speed.

But, whether I stretch the truth to get a spot now, or wait patiently until late spring, neither option feels good. I’m sitting in the tension that we’ve all wrestled with this year: whether our national and local public health officers are making the right choices to benefit the most people while we wait for herd immunity. For now, I have my name on an overflow list at the pharmacy and hope to receive a coveted “You’ve won the lotto” phone call offering me a same-day appointment.

We’ve all done so much to care for the vulnerable over the last year. We’re tired. We’re ready to resume life as normal where we host dinners with friends and send our children to school without worry. As I struggle with these feelings and choices, I’m choosing to do it publicly because I think the conversation matters. It matters because maybe putting COVID behind me is thinking far too narrow. Maybe, grappling with not getting what I want, when I want it, can give me insight into how often others are not prioritized or given equal access to the benefits I’ve always had at my fingertips. While my family does have underlying conditions, the numbers continue to show that our black and brown neighbors are dying at greater numbers even without underlying conditions. It really isn’t fair. Am I concerned for them in the same ways I am for my own family? 

Yesterday I received an email from MyTurn Volunteers, the State of California’s effort to get all 58 counties vaccinated. In it, they gave a few simple ways we can help everyone, especially the vulnerable, have access to the vaccine:

  • Check on four neighbors to see if they need help making their vaccine appointment on myturn.ca.gov.

  • Post flyers on community forums and around your neighborhood offering to drive neighbors to their vaccine appointment.

  • Post a selfie driving your neighbor to their appointment.

I would also add this: if you are eligible, please, please get vaccinated. People like my family are counting on you! Many pharmacies have overflow vaccines at the end of the day. If you or someone you know is in a high risk, high exposure category consider helping them research how to access these vaccines and/or how to check pharmacy sites for appointments. I’m grateful for a few good friends who pointed me to ideas of where I can (hopefully!) get vaccinated soon too.

Photo by Diana Polekhina on Unsplash

The Best of 2020

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—We Made It—

One of the hardest years in recent history is almost done—do you find yourself reflective this week? This year it feels particularly important to look for joy, celebrate even the smallest successes, praise God for his faithfulness, and acknowledge where we’ve fallen short in hopes of trying again in 2021. Most of my deepest reflections stay off the internet but I like giving a fun review of my favorite things, which you’ll find below.

If you’re finding it difficult to set your own goals for the new year, check out my post from last January called Goal Setting When Your Soul is Tired.

—The Favorites List—

Best Books of 2020: I read a lot more in 2020 than I have in recent years but I don’t think any book on my 2020 list was actually published this year except the first two, which are crucial reads for anyone wanting growth in their spiritual and emotional health: Try Softer: A Fresh Approach to Move Us Out of Anxiety, Stress and Survival Mode Into a Life of Connection and Joy by Aundi Kolber; AND Get Out of Your Head: Stopping the Spiral of Toxic Thoughts by Jennie Allen.

I also loved the memoirs, Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist and Our Lives Revealed AND I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness. One of the best parenting books I’ve ever read is Are My Kids on Track?: The 12 Emotional, Social and Spiritual Milestones Your Child Needs to Reach. For fiction I’d recommend Daisy Jones and the Six.

You can see my full 2020 Good Reads List here.

Best TV/Movies of 2020: Some Good News with John Krasinski, Ted Lasso, Little Fires Everywhere, Miss Americana, Peanut Butter Falcon and (don’t judge me)… Virgin River.

Best Music of 2020: Need to Breathe’s Out of Body album, Taylor Swift’s Folklore

Best Podcasts of 2020:  Nice White Parents, and The It Was Said podcast (particularly President Obama’s Charleston sermon) are two professionally produced shows that take a historical look at present day social problems with thought-provoking takeaways. I loved Remember Who You Are on The Next Right Thing—it’s a short episode that packs a big spiritual health punch. Mike Kelsey and Jemar Tisby on Why History Matters is a good intro for anyone wanting struggling with how to make sense of racial tensions in America. Also, I’d recommend a bunch of Bridgetown sermons including The Way of the Mustard Seed, and A Pastoral Word on the Election & Politics.

Best Blog Posts / Articles of 2020: For everyone, but particularly people of faith: The Evangelical Reckoning Begins / For the white person wrestling with race: A Story and a Prayer About Cake / For the writer: Bring Your Whole Self to the Story / For anyone who is afraid: How to Live in the Face of Fear: Lessons from a Cancer Survivor / For the Spiritual Seeker: Threshold Practices and Doorknob Prayers / For parents: How to Raise a Gracious Kid / For anyone who had to give up dreams this year: My post for Coffee + Crumbs

Best New-to-Me Recipes of 2020: Jonathan’s favorite fluffy pancakes / After School Banana Bread / Vegan Tofu Tacos / Sticky Sesame Chickpeas / Josephine’s Swedish Apple Pie and Andrea’s vegan and gluten free coconut chocolate chip cookies—neither of which exist on the internet but still receive honorable mentions.

What Worked For Me in 2020:  Finishing Theodyssey and starting it again / Staying in the moment / Reminding myself that “hard work is good for you” and “a dream delayed is not a dream denied.” / Embracing the bright sides of homeschooling / Running regularly / Free-range parenting / Becoming a crazy plant lady / Eating a LOT more plants / Memorizing scripture / Chasing solitude / Reading outside / Getting in the ocean instead of watching from the sand /Regular connection with our neighbors / Outdoor dining

Best Moments of 2020: Watching Owen ride a bike, starting a Readathon (and raising way more money than expected!), getting a puppy, four clear scans for Owen, seeing Half Dome again, hiking Smith Rock as a family, biking together, regularly seeing the sunrise.

Looking forward to in 2021: going mask free to the grocery store (please, dear Jesus, please), getting on an airplane, finishing the school year strong, having people over for dinner, corporate worship, starting a Master’s program.

—Something for YOU in 2021—

I’m starting a monthly e-mail newsletter. It’s called The Tide Chart and each month you’ll receive a short letter, a few of my favorite things, and a word of encouragement for your life journey. I’d love for you to consider subscribing…just click here and then look for the first newsletter in January.

Photo by Danil Aksenov on Unsplash

Things I Miss / Things I Could Have Missed

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Things I Miss

The communion line at church

Joining my voice with hundreds of others on Sunday mornings

The deep squeezes of people I love

Singing my heart out at concerts

The buzz of coffee shop energy as I work

The voices of little people in my van while carpooling to school

Easy decisions

Obnoxiously loud game nights with friends

Certainty

Things I Could Have Missed

Conversations with my neighbors

Noticing my youngest son become heavy in my arms

Puppy life

My oldest becoming friends with my youngest

Daily lunch with my husband

Witnessing the daily parking lot prayers at our neighborhood Catholic church

Winter evenings under twinkle lights

Wrestling with my privilege

Getting in the water instead of watching from the sand

Sundays as a family worshipping from our couch

One of our children’s unique learning challenges

Sitting with a friend through a heartbreaking loss

Countless sunrises over the water

The windy shores of Lake George

The need to be on my knees

Photo by James Coleman on Unsplash