Create More Opportunities for Margin – Part 2 In Part 1 of the Self-Care UPGRADE, “Create More Opportunities for Margin,” Dawn Wilson, explained the importance of creating more “spacious opportunities” in our lives to counter the busyness and mindlessness that can lead to stress, over-commitment and exhaustion. To repeat from Part 1: We won’t have wonderful, spacious opportunities unless we’re purposeful in making room for them. “Margin,” said Richard Swenson, M.D., “is the space between our load and our limits.” We want to intentionally fill that space wisely, even if it means “not filling” by allowing more space to grow. In Part 1, we considered the need for more margin in our home, calendars and budgets. In Part 2, let’s tackle four more areas: Health, People, Mind and God. 4. Create more space in regard to your HEALTH. For the Christian, this is important not only for ourselves, but as a testimony to others of the power of God working in our habits (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). How do we create margin for better health? Leave more time at nightfall for quality sleep. Work toward a healthy nightly rhythm that leads to better and deeper rest. Think: healthy eating! Stop stuffing your body with multiple snacks and processed foods. Give your stomach “room” to function efficiently. Intermittent fasting can be beneficial. So is mindful planning for a weekly caloric budget and sticking to it. Carve out time to move your body with whatever exercise you find most enjoyable. Think in terms of freedom of movement and building core strength. Practice deep breathing! Breathe in through your nose, hold that breath, and then exhale slowly through your mouth. One of the strongest voices helping me create nutritional margin is Lysa TerKeurst in Made to Crave, especially her devotional based on the book. Also, Lean Body, Fat Wallet is a double-whammy for health and finances, writen by Ellie Kay and Danna Demetre. Danna is one of the founders of Ageless Woman Living. 5. Create more space for PEOPLE, especially for family and friends. Our office files can’t hug us, and the television won’t give us love. Creating margin for relationships is even far more than social media, although that can play a small part. Time is limited, so aim for true connection. Quantity time AND quality time. Shut things off and turn up the volume on face-to-face connections. These times together will feed our need for emotional growth, and they will help us understand how we can “spur on” family and friends “toward love and good deeds” (Hebrews 10:24). We need one-on-one time to practice the “one anothers” of scripture. Our busy lives leave us less than satisfied. God’s Word and people, it is said, are the only two things that last from earth into eternity; and that should give us a sense of what is truly important. There are so many good books available on this topic. Just be sure their relationship counsel lines up with scripture truth. I learned a lot from Mary Kassian‘s Conversation Peace; Shaunti Feldhahn‘s book, The Kindness Challenge; and Gene Getz‘ book, Building Up One Another. And “Relationship specialists” Bill and Pam Farrel at Love-wise offer many, MANY books on building relationshps. 6. Create space for your MIND … time to think, ponder and meditate. If we don’t want our brains to become mush, we need to feed them with truth and wisdom (James 1:5; Psalm 90:12). We need to renew our mind so we can know and do the will of God (Romans 12:2). Spend time with a good book. The Bible, of course, will train our minds (2 Timothy 3:16); but biblically-based books or books of wise principles that do not contradict scriptural truth will also challenge us to think better. Or planning a social-mental “spacious opportunity” in a Bible or book study with a group of friends (Proverbs 13:20) Think Biblically! (edited by John MacArthur) helped me think with a Christian worldview; and Lies Women Believe (updated/expanded edition) by Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth helped me zero in on some foolish, unbiblical thinking. (Note: Lies Men Believe, written by Nancy’s husband Robert, will come out in August 2018.) 7. And this is most important: create a greater margin of time for God. We need space to pray and worship without distractions. We need time for the Lord every day (Psalm 55:16-17) to feed our spirit, train our responses and calm our hearts. We need to “Be still” and listen—to get to know our Father’s heart so we’ll know how to make wise choices (Psalm 46:10; Proverbs 2:6). We need to live with eternity in mind, walk by faith, and aim to please the Lord (2 Corinthians 4:18; 5:6-10). A life filled to the brim with a crowded or misguided schedule will never allow time for the Lord to fill us to overflowing with Himself. By far, the book that helped me understand the need to create a daily time with the Lord was Seeking Him by Nancy Leigh DeMoss (Wolgemuth) and Tim Grissom; but Experiencing God by Henry T. Blackaby and Richard Blackaby also built that relationship. Notice the word “create” in each of my seven points about margin. Be creative. Be intentional. How can you create more spacious opportunities? Ask the Lord what would be best eliminated or pared down in your life so you will have more room to breathe and grow. Dawn Wilson, founder and President of Heart Choices Today, is a speaker and author, and the creator of three blogs: Heart Choices Today, LOL with God (with Pam Farrel), and Upgrade with Dawn. She is a contracted researcher/reviewer for Revive Our Hearts and a writer at Crosswalk.com. She and her husband Bob live in Southern California and have two grown, married sons, three granddaughters and a rascally maltipoo, Roscoe Biblical Thinking Health Relationship with God Relationships Self-Care