2018 Lent Challenge
Replies
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ABSOLUTE
1) no swearing for 40 days - I need help on this haha
2) be a better "listener" for 40 days - friends yeah, but ALL ppl
3) hug my kids every morning and every night for 40 days
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SLIGHTLY FLEXIBLE - but aiming for as close to 100% as I can manage it
4) Only home cooking - as much as possible
5) No animal products (vegan) - as much as possible
6) No Alcohol for 40 days
I wish you the best on your 40 day journey.
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MaelynMayhem wrote: »Those are excellent choices. We all could do with listening more than we speak. I'm going to join you in giving up Facebook for 40 days as well as there's so much drama that goes on there which is impactful of my mood and mindset for the rest of the day.
Thank You! Today is day 1 of no FB, and using my 2 ears instead of my 1 mouth. Now is the time to have discipline and listen twice as much as I speak.3 -
For this Lent, I am going to adhere to my running training plan (5 runs per week). Our priest is an IronMan, so if he can find the time, so can I! Also, demonstrate more patience with my kids and pray with them at bedtime.4
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I've opted to forgo sugar this lent. God give me strength.6
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AnotherPlate wrote: »I've opted to forgo sugar this lent. God give me strength.
You can do it. The first few days will be the hardest, but you can push through them and do it.2 -
For this Lent, I am going to adhere to my running training plan (5 runs per week). Our priest is an IronMan, so if he can find the time, so can I! Also, demonstrate more patience with my kids and pray with them at bedtime.
That's an awesome training plan and attitude. The time you spend with your children is a blessing.2 -
@wi1234567890
To make this easier at first how about splitting the volume of your one cup of coffee into 2 smaller cups and have them at different times during the day. May help with your withdrawal and overall success of your challenge. Good luck.5 -
Me:1/40 days
Sugary snacks:0/401 -
@wi1234567890
To make this easier at first how about splitting the volume of your one cup of coffee into 2 smaller cups and have them at different times during the day. May help with your withdrawal and overall success of your challenge. Good luck.
I don’t even put milk or half and half in it. I use the powdered coffee mate creamer that is just crud and my stomach really doesn’t need it. I figure I consume about 300 calories of fake coffee creamer. Eliminating these extra calories should make weight loss easier.
I felt a little depressed this morning thinking about it but I’m realizing it’s not that terrible.
Thanks for the great suggestion anyway.
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lemurcat12 wrote: »In the old days, the reason for things like Shrove Tuesday/Fat Tuesday/Paczki Day (as it is today in Chicago) ;-) was that you would not be eating meat or animal products (although fish was permitted some places -- the Latin word for meat/flesh is distinct from that for fish). Anyway, as a result you'd be using up dairy and eggs.
The current Orthodox Christian fast is basically like that (my Greek friend always tells me how much more serious their Lent is). ;-) Catholics, though, just avoid meat on Fridays -- fish is fine, but it's really not in the spirit if you have a lobster dinner, it's supposed to be simple, cheaper (save the money saved and give it to charity is one common practice), plain, a sacrifice.
Nothing "current" about Orthodox fasting practices. They've been the same for a very long time. Fish is also a separate food category as far as Orthodox fasting is concerned, but that doesn't matter for most of Lent since fish is also not eaten on fast days. Exceptions are when a major feast like Annunciation falls during Lent as it usually does; fish will be permitted then. Even more so since Annunciation (on the New Calendar) falls on a Sunday this year, and fasting rules are also relaxed on the Sabbath and the Lord's Day to the extent that wine and oil are permitted.
(Annunciation for the Old Calendar is complicated this year, since it falls on Holy Saturday. There are special rubrics for this situation, which is impossible on the New Calendar, and since it's Holy Saturday it remains a strict fast day even though the feast coincides. Most Orthodox churches in the US are on the New Calendar, so it doesn't affect them.)
Orthodox and Western Easter are only a week apart this year, so Orthodox Lent starts on Monday, February 19. (A day labeled "February 6" on the Old Calendar.)0 -
MaelynMayhem wrote: »AnotherPlate wrote: »I've opted to forgo sugar this lent. God give me strength.
You can do it. The first few days will be the hardest, but you can push through them and do it.
Thanks a lot!2 -
No snacking after dinner!3
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lemurcat12 wrote: »In the old days, the reason for things like Shrove Tuesday/Fat Tuesday/Paczki Day (as it is today in Chicago) ;-) was that you would not be eating meat or animal products (although fish was permitted some places -- the Latin word for meat/flesh is distinct from that for fish). Anyway, as a result you'd be using up dairy and eggs.
The current Orthodox Christian fast is basically like that (my Greek friend always tells me how much more serious their Lent is). ;-) Catholics, though, just avoid meat on Fridays -- fish is fine, but it's really not in the spirit if you have a lobster dinner, it's supposed to be simple, cheaper (save the money saved and give it to charity is one common practice), plain, a sacrifice.
Nothing "current" about Orthodox fasting practices. They've been the same for a very long time.
Yeah, I know -- wasn't trying to suggest otherwise. We changed, you didn't.Fish is also a separate food category as far as Orthodox fasting is concerned, but that doesn't matter for most of Lent since fish is also not eaten on fast days.
My friend says shellfish is okay, however -- no animal products but for shellfish (which somehow doesn't count as animal?), and no oil.
Anyway, I just think different fasting practices are interesting. Ours are pretty low demand these days.0 -
I want to join in on this. I've been following this thread for a couple days trying to figure out what to give up for Lent. I think I've found it.
1.Rice ... It's my undoing lol I can eat with every meal.
2. Drink more water throughout the day.
3. Read a book(s)2 -
I’d like to join. These are the things I’m giving up/doing:
1. Coffee
2. French fries
3. Meat on Fridays
4. Reading every night - spiritual and pleasure
5. Some form of exercise every day
6. Writing every day
7. No first texting to my ex6 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »In the old days, the reason for things like Shrove Tuesday/Fat Tuesday/Paczki Day (as it is today in Chicago) ;-) was that you would not be eating meat or animal products (although fish was permitted some places -- the Latin word for meat/flesh is distinct from that for fish). Anyway, as a result you'd be using up dairy and eggs.
The current Orthodox Christian fast is basically like that (my Greek friend always tells me how much more serious their Lent is). ;-) Catholics, though, just avoid meat on Fridays -- fish is fine, but it's really not in the spirit if you have a lobster dinner, it's supposed to be simple, cheaper (save the money saved and give it to charity is one common practice), plain, a sacrifice.
Nothing "current" about Orthodox fasting practices. They've been the same for a very long time.
Yeah, I know -- wasn't trying to suggest otherwise. We changed, you didn't.Fish is also a separate food category as far as Orthodox fasting is concerned, but that doesn't matter for most of Lent since fish is also not eaten on fast days.
My friend says shellfish is okay, however -- no animal products but for shellfish (which somehow doesn't count as animal?), and no oil.
Anyway, I just think different fasting practices are interesting. Ours are pretty low demand these days.
You're right about shellfish. No one seems to quite know the reason for the exception. Some say it's because they don't have a backbone. (But the rules don't mention a backbone. Maybe the way the Fathers looked at it that makes them not-animals? John the Baptist ate locusts, after all.) Some say it's because, in some coastal regions, there's not a heck of a lot else to eat. Either way, dining on lobster every night would indeed be one of those things which, while technically within the rules, pretty thoroughly tramples the spirit of them. Even without drawn butter.
The basic idea is to eat plainly and simply, what is needed for sustenance and not much more, and to avoid luxurious foods. This is presumed to be more inexpensive than our normal eating, and one is expected to give the money not spent on food to those in need. It's also presumed to be easier than our normal eating, so that we're less focused on food and more focused on spiritual things, but one of the ironies of modern life is that nothing is easier than the McDonald's drive-thru.0 -
Made it on day 1/40. Ash Wednesday is fasting. I can't totally fast so I reduced each meal to only half portion, and did not have any snacks at all. Stomach grumbling all day which I downed with water. Wasn't too bad. Also started Rick Warren's book to set me well mentally and spiritually for Lent. Good Day everyone.2
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You're right about shellfish. No one seems to quite know the reason for the exception. Some say it's because they don't have a backbone.
Well technically they have a backbone, at least biologically speaking they have an exoskeleton that means the skeleton is on the outside rather than on the inside.
It may be because a while ago shellfish was one of the cheapest foods.
Ref. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/news/fancy-oysters-with-your-shakespeare-1882563.html
But things have changed now and I agree that a lobster meal isn't very fitting for lent!
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Well, day 1/43 done and happy with it.
I made a plan so I have my meals all planned out for when I travel and race, no excuses like I don't know what to make I wasn't prepared. I am prepared.
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