Christmas Wishlist – Small Business Faves

Big Dreams Daily Joys | Let’s Make Art Subscription |1 Canoe 2 Journals | Epiphanie Camera Bags | Magnolia Journal Subscription | Powersheets | One Little Word eCourse | Victoria Emerson Apple Watch Bands| Growth Book

As someone who’s #1 love language is gift giving (any one else?), Christmas is like the ultimate treat. I love spoiling my people with gifts and experiences that I think they will absolutely love. I’m also the type of person who keeps a running list all year long in case I see the perfect gift or someone mentions something specific that they’d like to have. I’m normally pretty prepared, but I also love to check out gift guides online and see what other people are digging to get ideas for family members or to add to my wish list.

This year, more than ever, we’ve seen the importance of buying from small and local businesses. At the beginning of Coronavirus, Kevin and I made a point to grab takeout from our local favorites and in seeing some local businesses struggle through this tough year, I’m realizing just how incredibly important it is to support them (especially the ones we love). For this reason, I’m committed to both shopping local and asking for gifts from local and small businesses as well going into the holidays, so I thought I’d share some of the things on my wishlist as well as other local and small businesses that would be fun to consider shopping at this holiday season.

It’s perfect for me that Christmas is right before the new year, because I love to ask for planners and workshops that are in a yearly format for the following year. For this year, I’m asking specifically for the Powersheets Goal Setting Planner (this is my fourth year asking for this!), the One Little Word eCourse for 2021, and the Growth Book which is a faith journal/workbook that spans a year. The 1 Canoe 2 journals aren’t necessarily in a yearly format, but I always think it’s awesome to start things like that in the beginning of the year if I can. In addition to these, I’m asking for a few accessories I wouldn’t buy myself – an apple watch band and a camera bag. Lastly, the gifts that keep on giving: two subscriptions. I have been reading Magnolia journal since it’s inception and I’m obsessed with Let’s Make Art’s art journaling box.

To get more than just my small business faves, I asked my Instagram followers for their input, too! Here’s what they suggested:

Amazing Missouri-Based Businesses

  • Etch.Life – This is a cute store based in Liberty, MO that retails faith-based gifts, clothing, home decor, and care packages.
  • Plume – A quaint little shop in south Columbia, MO that is home to over 90 local artisans and vintage connoisseurs, including cupcakes.
  • Kelly Fields – A Columbia, MO boutique that flaunts all the latest clothing trends, accessories, and gifts.
  • Two Pink Elephants – A boutique in O’Fallon, MO that is super reasonable and has lots of cute accessories.
  • Go Po – Gourmet Popcorn based out of Fulton, MO.
  • The Candy Factory – The name says it all – you just have to go there. Located in downtown Columbia, MO.
  • RF Home – Located in Kirkwood, MO, this shop has all the amazing home things, clothing, DIY Classes, and they do renovations.
  • CycleX – A bike shop in Columbia, MO that I will most likely be shopping at for Kev this holiday season.
  • Treats Unleashed – This pet store is based out of St. Louis, MO and has a shop in Columbia. Our pups will definitely be enjoying treats from Treats Unleashed on Christmas morning.
  • 1 Canoe 2 – Based in Fulton, MO this paper goods and stationary shop has hands down the cutest and best designed items.
  • Stitch 22 – A former coworker of mine makes the most amazing warm weather accessories and gifts (the scrunchies are my fave).
  • Ansgar Leather Co. – Amazing leather goods made in St. Louis, MO. (Always swooning over the journal covers.)
  • Helmi’s Gardens – If you have a plant lover in your life (or are one yourself…let’s be honest), this is your stop.
  • May Wynn – All the stunning artisan made hand crafted home goods. I could fill my house with things from this store.
  • Let’s Make Art – All the art goodies paired with subscriptions options and tutorials.

Other Small Businesses I Love

  • Soul Mantras – I buy a little token with my one little word from this shop every year. She has some beautiful pieces and is located in WA.
  • Get to Work Book – I’ve been following Elise (who is out of CA) for the longest time. I’m a huge fan of her minimalistic planner and rad motivation.
  • Illustrated Faith – An online shop filled with anything you could ever need for bible journaling, including workshops and printables.
  • Cloth and Paper – All the ring and disc bound planner goodies you could ever need to build your own or add to your current planner setup.
  • North Fork Chai Co. – A friend gifted me chai for my birthday, and let me tell you, you need this in your life.
  • Epiphanie – Lots of lovely camera goodies and accessories.
  • Magnolia – Chip and Joanna’s brand of all things lovely.
  • Cultivate What Matters – This is the shop where the Powersheets goal setting planner I use is from! Highly recommend.
  • Ali Edwards Shop – Ali is based out of OR and is a memory keeper and creator with the best products and classes. She teaches the One Little Word class that I’ve been enjoying since 2013.
  • Victoria Emerson – This shop has amazing bracelets that give you the stacked look without all the work. I’m specifically eyeing the Apple Watch bands this year.
  • Growth Roots Co – Creator of the Growth Book, this faith-based company designs and sells a journal that focuses on growth over the course of a year.
  • Blenders – A sunglasses company that has some pretty rad and polarized sunnies for very reasonable prices.

Where are you shopping this year? Are there any small businesses that I missed?

Rhythms

Rhythms have been on my mind a lot over the last year, especially moving from my intention of rest to my intention of open. I’ve thought a lot about my own rhythms – what mine are and why I have them – as well as how those compare to the things that are naturally occurring around me. It seems that this is made evident to me the most in the fall, as the leaves begin to change colors and lose their leaves. It sometimes seems hard to be aware of the changing of leaves budding in the spring, to being full and lush in the summer, to changing colors and falling in autumn, to the bare trees of the winter – and again and again each year without fail.

Rhythms are a regular reminder of times to speed up and slow down, work and rest, and inhale and exhale. I love rhythms over routines because they’re softer. They’re less like rules and more like encouragements. Rhythms are a way of saying that something is important without saying it’s a non-negotiable. It’s a way to show up for the projects, emergencies, and most urgent while still getting the day to day tasks done. Part of my daily rhythm right now is to make sure that I track my food and exercise daily but if something or someone needs me, that’s where I’m going to show up first. I will give up my exercise streak on my Apple Watch so that I could hold my best friend’s new baby and enjoy some extra sleep on a weekend away. Rhythms mean that I hit the exercise and calorie goal most days but that I’ll always get to prioritize my people over anything else.

I was excited to see that the Magnolia Journal’s fall theme was rhythms. After reading so many good things, I decided I wanted to memorialize their piece called An Essay on Rhythms:

Nature dances to a rhythm: In the way the sun rises and sets. In the birds’ song at sunrise and in the crickets’ chirp at sunset. In the way each season moves us along throughout the year…the annual cadence of a rainy April, giving way to a hot July, giving way to a crisp October, giving way to a cold January, and the thousands of little orchestras that follow the tempo of that grand symphony. The flowers move to the rhythm of the seasons: sprouting and budding and blooming and dying.

Humanity dances to a rhythm: in the holidays we celebrate the order in which they come. Costumes and candy give way to turkey and football, which give way to carols and gifts wrapped under the tree. We find rhythm in our daily commute, in the voice of the DJ’s morning report, in the stoplights and exits, in the pleasantries exchanged with the coffee shop barista. Rhythm comes with bodies that must be fed three times a day (give or take), with daily prayer and weekly meetings and monthly girls’ nights and yearly Super Bowl games. We create bedtime rhythms: We bathe our kids, brush their teeth, read them a story, tuck them in, and sing a song.

There is peace in rhythm. There is security and predictability. Not a stagnant sort of predictability, just enough to make us feel like everything is going to be okay, just enough to give us something to look forward to. Because while there’s a lot of rhythm, there’s also a lot of chaos. There are unexpected bills to pay, relationships to maintain, natural disasters, an ongoing to do list that will never be completely finished, flat tires, bad moods, burnt dinners.

But then there’s the sun, rising again. And then there’s our lungs, exhaling again. And then there’s Thanksgiving, right around the corner. We’ll take our afternoon coffee break. We’ll say a prayer. We’ll look up and see ducks flying south for the winter. We’ll cross the next thing off our to do list. We’ll get a new winter coat. We’ll plan a summer trip. We’ll go for an evening walk.

And we’ll tap our feet. We’ll sway back and forth. We’ll clap our hands. We’ll lean into the rhythms of our lives because they give us a sense of place in our story, clueing us in to where we’ve been and where we might expect to go next, offering us familiarity in the midst of a chaotic world – like our lungs filling with air and then emptying themselves and filling up again, like the ocean tides and the morning cups of tea and the annual harvest festivals: We embrace the rhythm of the season, and we find peace in the way it moves us.

An Eassy on Rhythm // The Magnolia Journal, Fall 2020

November Goals

In all honesty, this month was full of all the things – from amazing to anxiety-filled. I felt like the habits I’ve been building this year started to fall apart and I wasn’t able to stay on track with all of my goals as much as I had been since the beginning of the year. It was bound to happen, months get busy and obviously there is so much outside of our control, especially in 2020. I’m trying to go into November remembering that I can only control what’s in my grasp and I have to trust that it will be enough.  When I set goals at the beginning of 2020, here’s what I decided on:

Goal 1: Prioritize my health – physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, environmental, and social.

Goal 2: Allow open to be an invitation to live intentionally.

In October, here is how those two goals played out:

October Monthly Goals

  • Paint Built Ins – Moving this to November
  • Clean out basement and shop vac – Not fun, but it’s done.
  • Work on Real Estate Exam Course – Not as far as I’d like to be, but we’re still moving forward.
  • Participate in Ali Edwards’ Art of Noticing done!
  • Read 4 Books – I only finished two in October, but I got some more in the works.

October Weekly Goals

  • Two Orange Theory Classes Per Week – maybe my favorite goal of the month. Check!
  • Weigh In – yep!
  • Budget – stayed on track and reviewed weekly.
  • Tending Tuesday – done!
  • Weekly Sabbath – finished strong on this one.

October Daily Goals

  • Exercise – Rocked this one.
  • Read the Word – Not too shabby!
  • Hit H2O goal – I did about have the days this month.
  • Vitamins – I could have done better on this one!

October Highlights

  • Our friends, Jeff and Taylor, had their sweet baby boy.
  • I was on the FinalVibe Podcast.
  • I started going to Orange Theory workouts!
  • Kevin went on a 100 mile bike ride that ended a little differently than we expected. (Also, he has a Vlog.)
  • We go to get pumpkins, I take two days off work, and we visit the lake of the ozarks. Kevin also vlogged this weekend.
  • We spend an entire weekend in Hamilton and I get to enjoy lots of baby snuggles.
  • We had our first snow of the season on October 26. Normally I wouldn’t consider this a highlight, but here we are.

October Favorites

Food: Perfect Bars

Book: The Minimalist Home by Joshua Becker

Purchase: Jeans from American Eagle

Song: The Lakes by Taylor Swift

I managed to journal every day in October, which is a pretty awesome feat but also is a good indicator of me listening to what I need. I’m hoping to jump back on the bandwagon in November and knock out some more goals before the year comes to an end. Here’s what we’re looking at for November:

November Monthly Goals

  • Paint Built in Book Shelves – I’ve been wanting to to some touch ups and paint the entire section of built ins in our basement. We are using oil based paint, so I’m hoping for a good weather day for me to have the windows open.
  • Read 4 Books – It may not be reasonable to keep up the momentum from last month, but we’ll see how we do.
  • Replace Blinds – Our blinds are all wonky sizes, so we’re needing to get custom blinds made – I’m hoping for a good Black Friday deal.
  • Complete my Real Estate Courses
  • Show Small and Local for Christmas – I’m really hoping to support small and local businesses in both what I buy and what I ask for this year.
  • Vote on November 3rd!

November Weekly Goals

Most of these are the same as they’ve been, but I’m seeing progress in all areas, so I’m going to keep chugging. I’m adding the FinalVibe content calendar for each week, because that’s something that I’ve really been enjoying and that has been helpful to FinalVibe progress.

  • Two Orange Theory Fitness Classes
  • Weigh In
  • Budget
  • Tending Tuesday
  • Weekly Sabbath

November Daily Goals

  • Exercise
  • Read the Word / Prayer
  • Take Vitamins
  • Journal

What are your goals for November?

The Art of Noticing

A few weeks ago, Ali Edwards posted about noticing and the importance of a practice like this during a year like 2020. She gave the prompts of comfort, delight, rest, nourishment, and play and then encouraged us to take photos of each and share them on social media with the hashtag #aeartofnoticing. I loved seeing the perspective of others and participating in this challenge myself, especially since one of these is my word for next year.

Here are the photos and words I shared during this week:

COMFORT

Comfort is my spot on the couch.
Comfort is dogs for blankets.
Comfort is homemade bread and pot roast and crockpot soup and mac & cheese and meatloaf.
Comfort is being wrapped up in a long hug.
Comfort is sun streaming across my face.
Comfort is a big fluffy comforter and the perfect napping pillows.
Comfort is watering my plants.
Comfort is warm clothes fresh out of the dryer.
Comfort is tradition, and rhythms, and seasons.

DELIGHT

Typically delight looks like deep conversations, hosting all the people, and traveling. There hasn’t been much of that in 2020, so I’ve tried to look for more moments of delight in the small things. Sunsets, cinnamon rolls, art journals, growth, and nuggets of space for quiet and rest.

We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit that changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty. – Maya Angelou

REST

Taking photos of my feet is my regular practice of grounding myself, getting present, and in-the-moment rest.
(This is just a reminder to myself that rest doesn’t have to be big. Sometimes it’s taking a pause in the midst of the most full day.)

NOURISHMENT

I felt like I needed a little jumping off point for nourishment, so i checked out the dictionary definition: the food or other substances necessary for growth, health, and good condition.

So here we are, looking up. Enjoying the fresh air and nourishing my mind with the beauty around me.

PLAY

Enjoying this Art Journaling box from Let’s Make Art. Love getting to play with new-to-me mediums and techniques.