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About Hannah Koerner

Hannah is a California native who has realized she will never own too many books and will never stop learning (even if student loans demand she not go back to school). She drinks too much coffee, has an unhealthy love for beautiful cheese plates, and totally gets all of the hype about avocado - that stuff goes with everything. She is doing her best to learn to plan life in pencil, follow Jesus into unlikely places, love when it's hard, and never stop laughing at cheesy jokes.

January 10, 2017

The Pull To Fast

For a long time, I thought the concept of fasting was just a cruel joke for those of us who love food and have less than exemplary will power when it comes to certain foods. For the first 20 years of my life, I knew three things about fasting: I knew that we, as Christians, were supposed to. I knew that it was difficult in any form, but could vary depending on the severity and length of the fast you were doing. I knew I didn’t like it, because I really like food and I had never managed to do it without failing.

I had this idea in my head of what a perfect fast would look like, and for some unthinkable reason (probably, I’d surmised, because I suck) I had never been able to reach that holy grail fast experience in the handful of days I’d spent attempting fasts. And, if I’m being honest with myself, I was afraid that I’d take on this big, holy thing, and discover just how small and unholy I am.

God and I were not under any illusions that I was perfect, but did we really need tangible proof?

Thanks, but no thanks.

And then, in the end of 2013, I felt like I was supposed to start the new year with a fast. I had been home for Christmas and attending a young adult group at a friend’s church in Bakersfield, and they had decided and announced that they were going to do a corporate 21 Day Daniel Fast. My initial reaction was immediate gratitude that I’d be back in Davis, and that I’d get to miss out on yet another fast I didn’t want to do in the first place. But I couldn’t stop thinking about it. I dreamt about it, it kept coming up in completely unrelated conversations, and I kept feeling like I needed to pray about it. Finally, waving my white flag and with no small amount of dread, I signed up to do it.

I failed spectacularly.

Seriously, I lived on bananas and fresh peanut butter, I physically couldn’t eat enough beans to stay full, I missed coffee like a phantom limb, and I cheated more times than I care to remember. I was a hangry, hangry mess for most of those 21 days. I think I had catastrophized it to the point that it was not nearly as bad as I was anticipating, but I wanted to do fasting perfectly, and I most definitely did not attain perfection. There was spiritual attack, I felt incredibly isolated because everyone else doing that fast was 300 miles away, several things that had looked really promising leading up to those few weeks completely fell apart, and it seemed like I was worse off for having tried. I limped across the finish line, and swore I’d never go back.

Fast forward to mid-December 2014, and I felt the pull to fast again. I immediately shut that down, given all of the chaos that had happened last time. The rest of that year had been really difficult, so I certainly wasn’t signing up for anything else to not go my way. And still, the feeling that I needed to be faithful, even in the midst of assured failure, lingered. So I begrudgingly fasted again. While it went better than the year before, it certainly wasn’t easy and didn’t go perfectly. I patted myself on the back for a job well done, and for relatively little having fallen apart, and prepared to tuck the fasting urge away for another year. Except that once the fast ended in January, I felt like I was supposed to fast for lent. Sun up to Sun down, nothing but liquid.

I was not on board.

My birthday is in the Lenten season, and no food during the day was insane. Jesus was getting out of hand with this fasting business. Add to that, the week before lent started, I started a long term position teaching the Foods and Cooking class at the school I worked at. I spent 5 periods a day teaching kids to cook various foods, and then helping them do it, and I couldn’t have any of it. I resigned myself to a long 40 days, and set out. Maybe, I’d eventually get one of these things done perfectly. I made it 2 weeks to the end without breaking the fast parameters, and one of my students offered me some of one of the dishes they’d made, and I accepted without even thinking. I was three bites in when I realized what I’d just done, and that yet again, I’d failed at a fast.

I went home and cried.

Was I never going to reach a point where I was good at fasting?

I’m pretty routinely good at things, even if it takes me a couple of tries, but the fact that I had failed in my third consecutive fast seemed like the final nail in the coffin. I wanted to quit. I’d been so close, so close to doing the fast in a way that didn’t require grace. Doing the fast in a way that highlighted my self-control. Doing the fast in a way that showed God that I could hold my own in the things He had asked of me.

I’m still not sure how I had managed to make it that long thinking that was what God wanted from me when He asked me to fast. Stubborn tenacity and an incredible ability to miss what is staring me in the face, perhaps. Fasting does not require perfection. Not anything remotely close to it.

Fasting requires trust in the Lord, and a willingness to be faithful, even in the face of potentially the worst parts of yourself.

It is such an intimate practice, and I can’t stop myself from cringing whenever I hear anyone try to guilt or peer pressure people into fasting to stay in this “ideal Christian” mold. Fasting, at least in the middle of it, will not make you feel like a good Christian. According to Matthew 6 it isn’t supposed to be something used to laud your skill and merit as a believer at all.

It is a difficult thing to commit too, certainly, but it is also it’s own kind of beautiful.

I never enjoy the fact that I’m hungry, and having to constantly check myself to make sure that I’m not letting the way I interact with people be influenced because of the hanger. But it’s also such a time of closeness and communion with God. I let myself need Him so much more when I’m fasting.

I invite Him to invade so much more of my day when I’m fasting.

I see Him so much more readily when I’m fasting. All things that I should be doing every day, regardless of how much or what kind of food is being consumed, but I am often easily distracted by all of the things in life loudly clamoring for my attention, and fasting provides an opportunity to turn down the volume.

I don’t think that any two fast experiences look the same, even if it’s the same person fasting on two separate occasions, so there isn’t any one way to do it exactly right. It requires so much grace, and a willingness to fail and continue to show up. It is difficult, precious, ugly, sacred, growing and a thousand other conflicting things all at once. I won’t begrudge you for choosing to not fast, or try to tell you that you need to do so to be a better follower of Christ. You are never more loved and adored by our Creator than this very moment, and your works don’t improve or decrease that at all. I will invite and encourage you, however, to be receptive if the Spirit nudges you to fasting.

Whether you’ve never attempted it before, or you’re a seasoned pro at this whole business, following the Lord where He leads (even when that leading is into a period of fasting) always ends up giving back more than it asks of us.

If I had to sum up the advice I would give to those who are thinking and planning on embarking on a fast it would be this: Don’t get caught up in legalism and shame. Let yourself need the grace that is so, so abundant throughout the process and trust that God can and will work in this space regardless of how well you stick to the plan.

By: Hannah Koerner · Filed Under: Spiritual Life · Tagged: fasting

November 15, 2016

Rethinking Your Commute

I recently changed jobs, and went from living 2 minutes from the school where I worked, to being an hour away on a good day. I’ve never lived more than 10 minutes away from my place of work and school (other than the 2 years of preschool ages 2-4) until now.

I have never minded time in my car, I used to drive home for weekends usually once a month in college, and had a 4 hour drive to myself both directions. Last summer, I took a solo road trip up to Seattle from Bakersfield, and while the trip up there was slow and fun, the trip home happened earlier than I was planning, and I was in my car for 1100 miles without stopping for anything more than gas and food.

There is peace and simplicity when I am in the car.

I definitely yell at semi’s that pass each other, and get frustrated with bad drivers (I make too many references to Driving Miss Daisy), but the vast majority of the time, I enjoy being alone in my car. I sing weird harmonies, or try to sing all of the parts at once and make myself crack up. I listen to audio books on longer trips, I run through random scenarios that will probably never happen, and I have imaginary conversations with people in my life because of said scenarios that I will most likely never have in real life. I’m a little bit more external in my processing, and those hours in my car have helped me process and work through far more than I realize until after the fact.

I also have some of my best conversations with God in the car.

I tend to use distraction as my best method of avoiding dealing with hard things. I am chronically busy between finishing grad school, working two jobs, training for a half marathon, participating in several ministries and trying to find time to blog with any frequency. But when I’m in my car, I can’t send emails, work on papers, work, mentor or minister. It’s just me, with the jumble of things I’d rather not deal with, and God.
I really was expecting to hate this commute. And I admit, the hour in both directions really kills any ability to get things done in the evenings when I finally do get home. I do want to move closer, because a 15 minute commute makes scheduling my life much easier.
But even with all of that, I treasure that hour in the mornings in the car.
I spend more than half of it talking to the Lord, praying for people, conflicts, and relationships. For people I work with, minister with and those that just randomly are on my heart. For my family and my friends as they go into their lives. For myself that I would be more aware of God in the everyday hustle and grind and have peace and direction. For the people I work with in outreach and the community I work in. For the family I will one day have.
Honestly, I’m not sure anything exists that can center you so fully before you encounter traffic, work problems or the little annoying things that come (and add up) with having to get from point A to point B and deal with people. I definitely still am guilty of yelling at semi’s, and people on the road who are annoying to me. I don’t always get into work feeling nearly as zen as I was 30 minutes before. I don’t even go into each morning looking forward to the praying. Sometimes, I procrastinate on it, and get maybe 5 minutes in of hastily mumbled well wishes for my “regulars”.
I can say confidently, though, that my favorite mornings are the ones spent with the Lord, watching the sun rise on this dusty and beautiful valley. It’s definitely not the sunrise that makes the morning (as anyone who knows me can attest to the fact that I’m not very often a willing participant in mornings), but rather time that could be considered wasted, is set aside and guarded as time to spend with the Lord.

By: Hannah Koerner · Filed Under: Life · Tagged: mornings, prayer

October 20, 2016

Snickersnaps

A few years ago, I was a leader in my college group and had made it my personal mission to find someone to pull under my wing. I have no idea why I felt like I needed to transition into Mr. Miyagi, but I did, and there was a new crop of freshman coming in to Davis that year, and I knew my little guy was in there somewhere. I had no idea that I would indeed find a freshman to love, mentor and spend time with, but that she would be significantly taller than me, and I’d only get to keep her for a year. To this day, she is still one of my favorite people to snapchat with, and I can’t make Snickersnaps without thinking of her, because we made the very first batch together in my tiny South Davis kitchen.

I’ve since found a few recipes on Pinterest that are somewhat similar, but most of them use powdered ginger, and I can’t in good conscience, make a cookie that way. (#gratedorbust) Fresh ginger, molasses and my Aunt Charlene’s Snickerdoodle recipe make for unbelievably good cookies.

Happy fall, y’all.

Print
Snickersnaps

Ingredients

  • Chewy Ginger Cookies:
  • 2 1/4 cups flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 Tbsp (I usually add 3, because I like things really gingery, but that's up to you) grated fresh ginger
  • 12 Tbsp (1 1/2 sticks) room temperature butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup molasses
  • 1 egg
  • Aunt Charlene's Snickerdoodle Cookies
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) butter
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 3 1/2 cups of flour
  • 2 tsp cream of tartar
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1/4 tsp salt (none if using salted butter)

Instructions

  1. Chewy Ginger Cookies - Beat ginger, butter and sugar together until light and fluffy, adding in molasses and egg. Combine flour, soda and salt, and add to the wet ingredients until just combined. Chill for at least 1 hour (This step is super important. The cookies won't combine as well if you don't give it enough time to chill.)
  2. Aunt Charlene's Snickerdoodle Cookies - Mix the wet ingredients well creaming butter and sugar first. Add eggs in one at a time, and then vanilla. Sift together dry ingredients. Combine wet and dry ingredients slowly.
  3. Once the ginger cookie dough has chilled, and you've finished with the snickerdoodle dough, get another 1/2 cup sugar and 1 tsp cinnamon to roll the cookies. I like to use sugar in the raw, because the crystals are bigger and it looks prettier when baked, but that's totally up to you. Take between 1/2 tsp and 1 tsp of each dough, roll them together so they marble, and then roll them in the sugar. Place 2 inches apart on an un-greased sheet pan, and bake at 350 for 9-12 minutes.
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https://www.thecaptivatingwoman.com/snickersnaps/

You are welcome for the new joy in your life, and I’m sorry for the addiction it creates. Also, these two recipes together make ~8 dozen cookies, so feel free to make some and freeze the rest of the dough for up to 6 months. I’d freeze them each separately, but that’s mainly because I’m really fond of the marbling that happens.

By: Hannah Koerner · Filed Under: Food · Tagged: cookie recipe, fall, food

October 6, 2016

Meet Katie Juranek

Katie is one of my best friends (and if you’ve been following TCW, she is the one who was completely healed from arthritis in my post The Lost Art of Confession). She is a powerhouse spiritually, is the one who keeps me on track about being vulnerable and asking for the right kind of help when I need it. She is one of my favorite people in the world, because she is exactly who she is, and she loves you (and lovingly pokes fun at you) exactly where you are.

H: Who are you, where are you, and what do you do?

K: Hello! My name is Katie Juranek, from Pasadena, CA and somehow I am involved with four really awesome, life-giving things:

  1. I am a on pastoral staff at my home church working with Middle Schoolers.
  2. I own my own photography company to pay off my student loans.
  3. I am a Graduate student at Fuller Theological Seminary.
  4. I am fundraising to join the staff of YWAM as a missionary in 2017 where I’ll be in South Africa and Kona, Hawaii for two years!

H: Can you describe an average day of running around doing Katie things?

K: Currently, I am a part of some really awesome things, which makes every day different, i.e. here’s a snapshot of my day two weeks ago:

Started off my morning going through final edits of a wedding I had shot, then I worked at the church to prepare my sermon for Sunday and compiled a really tedious list to prepare for an All Nighter we have coming up. I then met with a potential supporter for lunch which incredibly encouraging. Then I drove with our church staff to a conference focused around the value of living life with the poor in our community to together encourage systematic change called CCDA! Oh, and between plenary sessions I was writing a paper for Finals week! Whew!

But those are events, but that’s not my life…

As often as I can, I drive to this spot by my house that overlooks a beautiful, lush valley – I feel ever so close to God as I stop and am still there. I believe that we can all have those moments of feeling that closeness to God, regardless of where we are; when I’m standing there taking in a beautiful landscape or when I’m sitting with a middle school student hearing about their lives. That closeness means that my average day may be a bit chaotic, but my presence is steady, and that is hopefully what I experience and accomplish on an average day! I would suggest this short read called “Practicing the Presence of God” (free in that link!) which has helped shape my thoughts on being present with people and experiencing God!

H:  When you hear the phrase “captivating woman” what comes to mind? Are there things that really stand out to you as those that make women captivating?

K: When I think of the women that I’ve met that are “captivating”, at the core of what I think is most remarkable about them is always who they are captivated by – you know it when you see it – you know when you sit down with someone and they catch you off guard with their presence with you, their intentionality, their love, their encouragement – how they clearly are a reflection of God’s love for you – it just pours out of them!

We could easily think of women that are talented, beautiful, intelligent– but the women that are so captivated by their love for God that it pours out of them in every interaction they have with you and others? That is captivating… I pray that may be said of me.

H: You work with youth and young girls all of the time. I know we’ve talked about the things that are lying ahead for them and wish we could help them understand ahead of time. If you could go back in time to 17 year old Katie, what are a few of the things you’d tell her?

K: Whew… 17 year old Katie… in one year I was about to experience a year of trauma would make me regress and stop trusting people for a long time… I so wish I knew other safe spaces– people, resources like therapy, etc., I so wish I knew how to ask for that help…

For everything I wish I knew, I can see the beautiful ways that God has helped provide spaces for healing in the years since, but having the chance to encourage some thought and discussion:

I just so wish I understood myself more as a 17 year old– I wish understood that pain cycles would trigger me and would leave me stuck in victimization and about the difference between my personality type and others (and the positives to these differences). Just so many things about self-awareness that lacked when I was 17 I wish I could explain to my 17 year old self to, if possible, save me from the painfully long process that it has been. So if anything– I can’t advocate more strongly both for finding a therapist and a mentor – each have their own unique role in your life and finding both has helped give a safe space to grow in my self-awareness!

H: Who are some captivating women you feel like we should be talking about/get to know?

K:  A few months ago I got to skype with a woman, who totally inspires me, who uses Instagram as a platform to share stories of education in South Africa and Kenya to spur on systematic change (she now has 38k followers on Instagram, woah!) her name is Rebecca (@stickylittleleaves). I’m also a big fan of Christina Cleveland as she spurs on the conversation about privilege, reconciliation and leadership, which is very near and dear to my heart. Also, her insights into the experience of single, Christian women has been so encouraging (she wrote a Liberation Theology for single people in the Church- amen!).  Last, but certainly not least, if you have not heard of Brene Brown– I cannot miss out on an opportunity to speak praises of what she shares as a researcher on vulnerability, it has changed my life, my relationships and my future- go buy her book(s) now! (I would suggest reading “Daring Greatly” and then “Rising Strong”).

H:  Do you have a spirit animal?

K: I resonate the most with Leslie Knope with my passion for justice, insane organization and being an incredible gift-giver, combined with the shameless sarcasm of Chandler Bing, which in a dream world would end up with my being a new roommate on an episode of New Girl.

H:  Favorite bible verse/story/lesson?

K: The story of Jeremiah has been one that God has brought me back time and time again to- which has served as an encouragement to persevere in faithfulness to what God is calling me to do, even when I have been misunderstood- but is also such a weighty example (jeez God!).

Jeremiah is known as the weeping prophet because for 41 years he shared the same message persistently (which in of itself is huge). A couple of things about his story really stick with me: 1) In 1:4-10 it shows that Jeremiah knew his Call, he questioned his experience, but not his call, and that is what kept him going, 2) I also love in 1:5-8 that the basis for overcoming fear is the assurance of God’s constant presence. Those two statements have been a consistent theme of the last four years of my life and I hope that they can be an encouragement to you: God knows you and offers a life that is not based on fear, but on life! If I could wish anything for the middle schoolers I work with, my community, the people I meet in missions, thecaptivatingwoman.com readers, it would be that you hear and truly understand that He extends that offer to you as well!

By: Hannah Koerner · Filed Under: Meet Captivating Women · Tagged: captivating women, women to know

September 13, 2016

Ask For What You Need

I love to people watch. I enjoy meeting friends after work for a drink, but the part that usually sways me from just inviting them to my house and having them there instead is the promise of people watching. We are a fascinating species, and I’m not sure I’ll ever get tired of watching people interact, picking up on the cues from body language and expressions.

Because I try to be observant, and feel like I read people well – I get frustrated when the people in my life don’t seem to be accurately reading me.

And for a long time, I held out, wishing that someone in my family and close circle would know me well enough to know what I needed without me having to actually ask for it. And sometimes they did. But more often than not, they assumed that I needed something, I know how to ask for it.

I hate that.

It’s not an unfair expectation. I am rather self-assured as a general rule, and don’t have an issue having hard conversations or adapting to change if it means that something gets done well and more efficiently than the alternative. I try to be conscientious of others – but I’m also unnervingly stubborn when it comes to accomplishing whatever it is I’ve decided upon.

Except that somewhere in the 20-plus years I’ve been alive, I’ve managed to divorce asking for what I need to accomplish my to-do list, and asking for what I need to feel wanted and worthy.

I told myself for a long time that if these people really loved me, if they really knew me, they would get it. They’d do it, because who would willingly deny someone something they considered vital to being loved and valued? And if they didn’t, I probably didn’t actually need that thing or that conversation after all. And so I spent a lot of time secretly resenting the people I loved because I felt like they were wronging me. Like they didn’t know the real me. Like they couldn’t possibly like the real me because she was going to ask things of them that they weren’t willing to voluntarily give.

Friends, please hear me when I say this:

Ask the people you love for what you need.

Ask them.

That conversation may be awkward and painful and filled with frustration, but it is the only way you can reasonably expect to feel like your needs and wants are being converted to the other people. Even then, they may not fully get it. But like anything in life, the more you practice – having hard conversations, setting boundaries, being specific and explicit in what you need from people – the better you get at it.

It doesn’t meant that they will actually act on any or what you have expressed to them. They may not respond in a healthy or helpful way to you and the amount of bravery and work it took for you to put into words what you need from them. They may hear you, and get you, and still continue doing what they’ve always done. That puts you in an entirely different situation, filled with entirely different hard conversations, but you have done what you can to be transparent.

Deep down, no matter what people seem on the surface, we all want to be known by those we love. But it is unfair of us to assume that being fully known requires no effort on our part. It does require effort, and finding tactful ways to speak the truth in love, and coming back with equal parts forgiveness and apology when it’s not been done right. If it ever gets easy to have those conversations, that’s surprising and welcome news to me…but if my gut is right, it won’t. It may get easier – because we know that they end result is worth the discomfort. or because we learn to trust the process so the whole thing isn’t as anxiety inducing as it once was.

I look forward to that day in my own life, because my heart still pounds and my stomach still pools with dread whenever I have to have those conversations. And honestly – sometimes I avoid them for far longer than I should, because the whole situation wants to send me spiraling into a mess of my own anxiety triggers. When I’m spiraling, I feel like they are terrible, horrible experiences that freak me out…but I know that good things require work, effort and the tenacity to get up again and face those things that leave me shaking in my boots.

And those conversations, scary as they are, are good things. Are healthy things. Are worthy things.

By: Hannah Koerner · Filed Under: Life · Tagged: friendship, self care

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