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Erin Franco

“Hold your horses!”: The need to grow in interiority

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2013 21 Feb

My mom was full of euphemisms when I was growing up. I think it’s a Southern thing, and I love her for it.:) Anyway, one of the euphemisms I remember best is, “Hold your horses!”, which was utilized whenever somebody was getting ahead of herself in action or anxiety.

I think that women often struggle with a certain tendency to sometimes let our thoughts and worries get away from us…like a herd of wild horses perhaps.:)  We worry and agonize. We think and think and think about our problems and challenges until we are in near-despair, or hysteria, or fear, or indignation.

I do not presume to say this is a tendency of all women (neither am I saying that men can’t make mountains out of molehills too!:)

Some people come out of the womb with naturally easy-going personalities. But I think that truly steady hearts are grown by progressing in the spiritual life. Those souls get to the point that they can reign in their thoughts and allow “the peace of Christ which surpasses all understanding to guard their hearts and minds.” 

Blessed John Paul II, whose showed over and over again in life and writing that he honored, respected and maybe understood women maybe better than we ourselves, said once that women, especially, need to grow in interiority,  to be “women of prayer.” 
I’ve been learning more about this interiority stuff. I am learning that interiority is not a lofty, exclusive, pie-in-the-sky goal only for the likes of saints and religious. It’s for us Everyday Folk too. It’s not about “keeping everything bottled up inside.” It is not about being scrupulous or unhealthily turned inward on ourselves.

Interiority is about becoming a woman of prayer and pondering–like Mary was. The Bible tells us that at the most pivotal, confusing, and important points in Mary’s life, she simply “pondered all these things in her heart.” Always, our Blessed Mother was receptive, trusting, accepting and hopeful. No matter what.

I was at a talk recently in which the priest reminded us that both sin and sanctity begin in our thoughts. I had never thought about it like that before. It makes so much sense to me to focus on how to reign in my thoughts and emotions. It makes sense, knowing my tendency to worry or to work myself into anger and bitterness sometimes, to learn how to throw out the trash and let in the treasure of the Holy Spirit’s counsel and grace–before I lose sight of Heaven because I have turned so far inward onto myself.

“You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in You.” ~Isaiah 26:3

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2 Comments · Last Updated: May 29, 2015

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Comments

  1. Ashleigh says

    February 21, 2013 at 4:12 pm

    God must have guided me to read this today. I'm a terrible 'fretter' My family and I have just moved house, and right now I'm worrying to the point of hysteria about balancing our new budget, and a couple of big purchases we NEED to make (one being a boiler for our old property).

    I've been stressed, and angry. I've been impatient with my husband and kids, and downright cruel to myself. Thank you for this reminder to be still long enough to know God's love and peace.

    'All will be well, and ll will be well, and all manner of things will be well.'

    Reply
    • Erin Franco says

      February 22, 2013 at 4:36 am

      Ashleigh, I am so glad this blessed you…praying especially for you and your present challenges tonight. Girl, I've been there! 🙂

      Reply

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Hi there!

I'm a south Louisiana girl, Catholic wife, writer, speaker, and mother of six. Since I started my blog way back in 2009, life has been a roller coaster of babies, plot twists and a plane crash or two. I've been chronicling things here as I've been learning to love and suffer and laugh and trust in the goodness of God in the ordinary and the extraordinary--with a little espresso and a lot of Divine Mercy. Read More…

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