Friday Gallery: Bulldog Tattoo in the Artist Spotlight!

For my first Artist Spotlight, I want to highlight a piece of art near and dear to my heart.

And nearer and dearer to my upper arm…

When my kids were little, there was a very popular philosophy of parenting that went something like this:

Our job as parents is to fill our children’s buckets of self-esteem so full that no matter how many holes the world pokes, it won’t run dry. 

Pinterest became flooded with charts and graphics highlighting “bucket filling” compliments and self-esteem-builders parents needed to be constantly pouring into their children.

I love a good compliment.

I’m a big fan of giving my children love.

And the concept of filling their buckets sounds kind of sweet, I suppose.

And it sounds like a lot of pressure.

And it sounds like…

well….it kind of sounds like crap.

I am one person. I could spend every waking minute of my children’s lives “filling their buckets” with compliments and encouragement and it would not be enough to combat the many voices they will encounter in their lifetime who will poke holes in their buckets.

As much I love my children, I also know I’m not always the perfect model of patience and grace (seriously. It’s true) and sometimes I’m going to mess up and poke a few holes in their buckets myself (read: all.the.time). Not to mention – what would happen if I was suddenly taken from them, after teaching them that their self-worth was built on how full I could fill their buckets?

There must be another way.

Enter the children’s book “You Are Special” by Max Lucado.

In the world Lucado creates, a village of wooden people called Wemmicks spend their days plastering other villagers with stickers – gold stars for compliment worthy actions or appearances, black dots for perceived failures. The Wemmick version of filling, and poking holes in, buckets.

One Wemmick, Punchinello, spends his days trying to earn stars, trying to earn acceptance from others, only to be repeatedly covered with dots. Dejected, he wanders the village and eventually happens upon a Wemmick named Lucia who, much to his surprise, has NO stickers.

No dots.

No stars. 

She responds to his curiosity by bringing him to meet the woodcarver who created the Wemmicks. The woodcarver reminds Punchinello of his inherent value, his worth as a created being, regardless of his appearance, talents, any other qualifier, or any other person’s opinion. 

As Punchinello is bathed in those reminders, one of his stickers begins to peel and fall away. 

No matter how many stars we gather, there are always going to be dots. The stars alone will never feel like enough and there will never be enough water to overcome the holes others will poke in our buckets.

But the stickers only stick if they matter to you.

When you know that you have inherent worth, that you are loved as a created being, no matter what you or others say about you, no matter how people treat you, the stars and dots don’t measure our value. 

Measuring our life based on the stars and dots we receive from others or place on ourselves leads to transaction-based relationships, and transaction-based relationships far too often result in control, manipulation, and abuse. These are not the basis of real relationships. Love is.

Fresh Ink from Kerry @ Bulldog Tattoo, reminding me to let the stars and dots peel away.

Much love and gratitude to Kerry at Bulldog Tattoo for his incredible work turning this idea into a piece of art I can carry with me everywhere, reminding me that “the stickers only stick if you let them.”

(his worth is not based on what a great job he did creating this piece, but I still believe compliments and gratitude are worth sharing!)

You can check Kerry out on Instagram to see more of his work, and you can order “You are Special” by Max Lucado just about anywhere books are sold online. Available in hardcover, paperback and a condensed board book.

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On Wednesdays We Reflect: What is Love (Baby, Don’t Hurt Me, No More)

What is the basis of healthy relationships? 

Love. 

Love is the motivation and the language and the boundaries. 

Never has something been written about more, or understood and practiced less. 

If we want healthy relationships – real relationships – we need love. 

Love is the imperative.

So what is love? What is loving?

All I keep coming back to is that love is grace and truth and love doesn’t look the same in every situation. That’s part of what makes love so hard to define.

We are provided with frameworks for love and then we begin to systematize Love. We turn the poetic descriptions into rules and then weaponize the rules and call it faith.

Love is not a weapon.

What does it look like to love, to actually love, in every situation, and to recognize that love may not look the same in every situation?

What does it look like to think about how our love offerings may be perceived and received by others?

As I have considered what it means to be loving, I’ve spent time reading through 1 Corinthians 13. It’s one of the most commonly quoted sections of scripture regarding the subject of love, so commonly quoted it is known as “the love chapter,” and like so many other descriptions of love, it has not just been quoted but also misquoted, misunderstood, misused, and weaponized. As I read through the chapter, I considered each section, and thought about how Jesus applied love in various circumstances.

LOVE is patient

 And with WISDOM, there is a time LOVE says, “enough”

LOVE is kind

 Kind is not necessarily nice. Kind is not passive. Kind is not permissive.

LOVE does not envy

 LOVE sees that what is sacrificially given multiplies.

LOVE does not boast

 It’s not mine, it never was mine,

 boasting is grasping and when we grasp, we strangle LOVE

LOVE is not proud

 LOVE is vulnerable. Open palms facing up.

LOVE does not dishonor others.

 LOVE holds space for humanity and God in you.

 LOVE does not permit space for evil actions.

LOVE is not self-seeking

 Self is temporary. LOVE is eternal. Self is finite, LOVE is infinite

LOVE is not easily angered

 LOVE can reach anger. LOVE uses anger. LOVE does not start with anger.

LOVE keeps no record of wrongs

 LOVE does not count the spots on the apple, and LOVE recognizes poisoned fruit.

LOVE does not delight in evil

 No matter the justification. No matter the situation. No matter the perpetrator.

LOVE rejoices with the truth

 No matter the difficulty. No matter the situation. No matter the speaker.

LOVE always protects

 Protects truth, not lies. Protects honor, not evil. Protects kindness, not pride.

LOVE always trusts

 Rejoicing with the truth and taking no delight in evil.

LOVE always hopes

 With surety and faith, not wishes.

LOVE always perseveres.

 Patiently protesting,

 giving and releasing,

 honoring truth,

 protecting in kindness

 and hoping,

 always active.