Wall Décor Plus More WDPM130 Life Takes Us Love Brings Us Home Wall Vinyl Sticker Quote, 6 x 24-Inch, Black

6 Comments/Reviews

  • Tabzster says:
    4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Wall Art, January 5, 2012
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    This review is from: Wall Décor Plus More WDPM130 Life Takes Us Love Brings Us Home Wall Vinyl Sticker Quote, 6 x 24-Inch, Black (Tools & Home Improvement)

    This saying inspires me a lot and makes my place feel like home instead of just a place that I come to every night. It peeled off easy and took minimal rubbing on the wall before I could peel the film off. It took about five minutes the whole process and the letters look great.

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  • Sum_Bum says:
    3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Looks Great!!, March 13, 2013
    By 
    Sum_Bum

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    This review is from: Wall Décor Plus More WDPM130 Life Takes Us Love Brings Us Home Wall Vinyl Sticker Quote, 6 x 24-Inch, Black (Tools & Home Improvement)

    We recently became foster parents and we chose to put this above our new foster daughter’s bedroom door to remind her every time that she enters, although we are her foster parents, this is her home too.

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  • Samantha says:
    3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    LOVE IT, August 4, 2012
    By 

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    This review is from: Wall Décor Plus More WDPM130 Life Takes Us Love Brings Us Home Wall Vinyl Sticker Quote, 6 x 24-Inch, Black (Tools & Home Improvement)

    I LOVE MY WALL DECOR… IT GAVE MY ROOM THAT FINISHING TOUCH IT NEEDED,,, WHEN I WAKE UP I ENJOY READING THIS QUOTE… GREAT DELIVERY AND FAST SHIPPING..

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  • Books and Chocolate says:
    2,817 of 2,967 people found the following review helpful
    2.0 out of 5 stars
    The Message Gets Lost in the Words, February 22, 2011
    By 

    This review is from: One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are (Hardcover)

    I think this is one of those reviews that I’m going to take some heat over because I know this book and the author are very popular in Christian circles right now. That’s why I wanted to read it myself, because I had heard so much about it.

    First, the positive. I know several bloggers who are sharing their own 1000 gifts/gratitude lists and I’m always blessed to read them. I have kept my own accounting of what I call “grace notes” for years so I understand the blessing of looking for things to be thankful for. Voskamp shares from her heart with stories about her family and her own spiritual journey, and I think anyone reading this book would come away with a heightened sense of looking for God’s grace in daily life whether it be having one’s child come through surgery or the admiring the beauty of a full moon. I appreciate the encouragement to live life fully right where we are without feeling we need to work through a “bucket list” of daring experiences or exotic locations before we can be fulfilled.

    But, this was a difficult book for me to read. Voscamp is obviously a poet at heart but the entire book is sing-songy with long descriptions and awkward word phrases and metaphors that I found distracting. It doesn’t read as someone would actually talk in real life conversation.

    As an example: “…tonight over our farm will rise the Great Hexagon of the blazing winter stars – Sirius, Rigel, ruby Aldebran, Capella, the fiery Gemini twins, and Procyon, and in the center, scarlet Betelgeuse, the red supergiant larger than twice the size of earth’s orbit around the sun – and I will embrace the skin of a boy child that my body grew from a seed. The low heavens outside the paned windows fill with more snowflakes than stars, no two-stacked crystals the same; the trees in the wood draw in collective green breath to the still of January hibernation, and God in the world with birth ice from His womb, frost of heaven, bind the chains of the Pleiades, loose the cords of Orion, and number again the strands on my head.”

    Those who like this kind of poetic narrative with mystical undertones will enjoy this book. Those who don’t will likely struggle to find the message in the sea of words. For me, it was just too much page after page, and it took me a while to finish the book because I had to take it in small doses.

    I was also wary of the mystical/contemplative spirituality/emergent church references, as she references those known to be mystics, panentheists, universalists, or New Age authors such as Brother Lawrence, Henri Nouwen, Annie Dillard, Brennan Manning, Sarah Ban Breathnach, Teresa of Avila, and Dallas Willard, among others. The influence of the teachings of these various authors is apparent in Voskamp’s writing.

    In addition, I was uncomfortable with the chapter on making love to Jesus in which the author speaks of seeking communion with God in what can only be termed as sexual language, taking it to a level that I personally don’t believe scripture intends. Voskamp writes, “Mystical union. This, the highest degree of importance. God as Husband in sacred wedlock, bound together, body and soul, fed by His body, quenched by His blood . . . God, He has blessed – caressed. I could bless God – caress with thanks. It’s our making love. God makes love with grace upon grace, every moment a making of His love for us. . . . couldn’t I make love to God, making every moment love for Him? To know Him the way Adam knew Eve. Spirit skin to spirit skin. . . The intercourse of soul with God is the very climax of joy . . . To enter into Christ and Christ enter into us – to cohabit.”

    Scripture doesn’t teach that our relationship with God is to be a sexual, orgasmic experience or that we are to know him the way Adam as husband knew Eve as his wife. Further, what are children and men supposed to do with the notion of making love to Jesus?

    Despite the doctrinal and personal issues with this book, I tried to stay focused on what I felt the author’s intended message of the book was: live fully and abundantly in daily life by being thankful for the gifts that come from God’s grace, no matter how small. I am inspired to live more fully in this kind of gratitude.

    This review is simply my opinion of what was actually in the book and not a reflection on the author herself, whom I do not know personally. Her writing style just doesn’t appeal to me and I have to question some of the “theology” in the book which is why I recommend discernment when reading it.

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  • Amo says:
    520 of 551 people found the following review helpful
    2.0 out of 5 stars
    Baffled, March 22, 2011
    By 
    Amo

    This review is from: One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are (Hardcover)

    I am a little baffled by One Thousand Gifts. Baffled that everyone seems to love the book, baffled at the reviews, and baffled that I do not seem to be enjoying the book like I expected.

    I have seen some major comment craziness over this book which causes me a little apprehension in sharing my thoughts because I don’t particularly want to be stoned or have virtual banana peels throw my way. The truth is; however, I did not love it. I had to force myself to keep reading which having a review copy demanded.

    Sure, I was touched by the sadness author Ann VosKamp has had to deal with and I wished it was not so for her. Plus, I think giving thanks to God is important; however, I found myself weighed down by her constant, poetical voice. It was hard to follow and taxing to read. Sometimes, I wanted her to say what she meant straight out and not make me search for the intended meaning nor be forced to reread sentences because of the unconventional wording. I personally feel that her prose works for short blog posts but not an entire book, and I wondered if the entire message of the book could be condensed into one or more blog posts that would have been just as encouraging.

    As I was reading, there were sentences and sections that made me pause and want to line it up with truth. I wondered if in her manner, there were liberties taken. Just three of the parts that made me wonder were as follows:

    “If clinging to His goodness is the highest form of prayer, then seeing His goodness with a pen, with the shutter, with a word of thanks, these really are the most sacred acts conceivable.” (pg. 61) So, writing down or taking pictures of what you are thankful for is a sacred act and actually “the most sacred act conceivable”?
    “Here is the only place I can love Him.” (pg. 70) She can only love God when she writes her list?
    “…discover how to make love to God.” (pg. 201) When you use certain words and phrases, you think certain things (sex, not necessarily intimacy).

    Perhaps these questions I had were because I was not enjoying the poetry in it all. I do understand that a new voice, a break from ordinary is refreshing and her fan base is solid. Based on bloggers I read and Tweets I am following the majority are devouring One Thousand Gifts.

    I did not enjoy One Thousand Gifts, but I do like Ann VosKamp. I read her blog, Holy Experience, at times and sometimes, I link up. From my readings, I believe she loves God with all her heart and desires to serve Him; so none of that is in question here. Plus, despite the fact that the reading was laborious to me, I did close the book desiring to keep writing my list of thanks and wanting to see God’s hand in all of my life, which was the purpose and goal of the book to be sure. Thanks to Ann, I have a list going that started long before her book and because of her blog.

    One Thousand Gifts was given to me by the publisher in exchange for my honest review.

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  • Minnaloushe says:
    103 of 111 people found the following review helpful
    2.0 out of 5 stars
    Meh. An over-sweetened Latte., July 28, 2011
    By 

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    This review is from: One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are (Hardcover)

    I have resisted reading this book for some time. Everyone I knew and their sister, and friend, and, and, and- was reading it. Finally I could not take it anymore. Maybe there was something about being thankful I have missed out on that Ann had discovered? I knew the premise of this book, sat in on some conversations on it, blah, blah, blah. I will make it quick.

    1-First of all it is so easy to get lost in the words. I am a writer too, and I love poetry, my eyes are skilled to read, my brain to comprehend, and yet I found both to be quite difficult while reading this.

    2-It is just too lengthy. I kept screaming inside- “OK! I GET it!”

    3-I have a Bible Degree. Talk about stretching the scriptures to accommodate your ideas. I see what she was trying to do, but it is a little over the top. I don’t think, in many areas, the scriptures mean what she is deriving from them. Now there is a certain amount of interpretation that I think is allowed, but this, in areas, was taken too far.

    4-The last chapter is appalling. As some have already said. I cannot view God in the sensual (mildly put) manner she uses here. It freaked me out. Now I am not someone who is uncomfortable with the idea of sex, not in the least. But in this context. Yucko. Yucko. Not good.

    5-I feel this book, though meaning to be encouraging is in fact depressing. I don’t see how focusing so much on the negative is a way to the positive. Let’s just be positive. I know life is hard, and hard things happen. I think this book would be better for those who have been through trauma. It’s a little more melancholic than I think the average reader with average bad days can gain from.

    I am shocked in a way at all the 5 stars. It creeps me out that Christianity seems to be taking this overly emotional, and dramatic turn. (as seen in the overabundant interest in this book) I prefer a more solid view of God, and Jesus. But then I prefer to sing hymns, over sappy worship songs.

    If I had to liken it to something it would be this- An iced coffee with too much syrup, so much syrup, that you literally gag on the sweetness, and your tongue is desperately searching to taste the coffee, the actual coffee, but it is just lost in the sticky, gooey, sugary syrup.

    I gave it 2 stars because it has created more thankful people.

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