I recently had an epiphany thanks to one of my own posts. I was reminded of this post I wrote in 2019: Understanding Why Your Creative Child is Lazy. If you’ve never read it, I think it’s one of the more important posts I’ve written and one that hardly gets read. The section about the stages of the creative process is important for parents of creative children.
I realized that part of the reason I have felt varying degrees of stuck, unmotivated, lazy, etc. for months isn’t because it was time to throw in the towel after 20 years of blogging. It was because I’ve been going through the creative process in the midst of many other life transitions.
I’m currently processing so much on top of the creative process.
- What it means to blog and work online now in the era of AI.
- What it means to have my only child approaching the end of her homeschooling years.
- What it means to have a husband who is of retirement age but not retired.
- What it means to know I have less years ahead of me than I have behind me.
- What it means to be less than perfectly prepared financially for our later years.
- What it means when you and your husband both can feel yourself starting to slow down physically.
- What it means to live in the midst of cultural upheaval, not knowing what lies ahead.
- What it means to be rethinking significant parts of your theology.
Each one of these is a big life topic. To have all of them hitting in the same year or so has been a lot to take in and process. I wouldn’t say it has left me paralyzed, but it has meant that there have been way too many variables going on at the same time to easily make decisions.
So I realized part of what I’ve been struggling with is trying to not only be engaged in the creative process but also doing that in the midst of a rapidly changing culture, a changing home situation, and more things that I didn’t include.
Anyone who knows me in real life knows I am not a lazy person. I’m just the opposite. I’m a highly-productive person. Or at least I was before I hit age 40 and then age 50. But I have struggled with focus over the past year or so which has made me unproductive. Again, there were way too many variables to weigh in each decision. I probably could have posted every day for the past year, but no one wants to read me hashing out my thinking day after day. So I would pop in from time to time and try to share a bit of what I’ve been dealing with.
In reality, trying to make decisions that align with every aspect of life has been difficult. I wrote in Creating a Cozy Life:
A cozy life or cozy living is what I call the coming together of purposeful living, simple living, and faithful living.
- Purposeful Living – We make purposeful choices rather than going with the flow, even if it means being different from the crowd.
- Simple Living – We include only those things in our life that bring real value.
- Faithful Living – We make choices that align with our faith and core beliefs.
So cozy living is living purposefully and simply according to our deeply held beliefs.
When we choose a cozy life, we can bring peace, understanding, and joy to our home.
Trying to find that balance in my life has been challenging. Maybe part of the reason the Lord allowed this experience is so I can help others as they move through different phases of life that complicate each other.
In any case, things finally started falling into place the past few weeks. Believe it or not, one of the key factors in seeing clearly was realizing how much AI can actually help me. I know that sounds crazy, but it’s true.
As I wrote in a Gab post this morning, AI is the research assistant I could never afford.
I’m a published writer turned blogger who became a homeschooling mother. My opportunities to do any kind of in-depth writing have been much less over the past eighteen years (for obvious reasons).
What I have discovered is Gab AI is the research assistant I could never afford. Many writers have research assistants. Many authors have ghostwriters. The average writer cannot afford to hire even one part-time research assistant.
Using Arya, ChatGPT, and Grok, I can research a topic in literally 5-10 minutes that would normally take me half a day. I don’t use this kind of language often, but it really is life-changing what it makes possible.
I was discussing this with another blogger this weekend. We’re both kind of blown away with the opportunities this provides us as homeschooling mothers and bloggers with limited time.
So I found part of my answer in the very thing that was complicating my thinking. Who knew? It’s strange the way life unfolds at times.
In the end, this was the only long-term answer that addressed the big questions. I’ve been working toward this the past few weeks, but haven’t said much.




I am still sorting out the last details with the breaking of the site into four. But I’ve made excellent progress. I’m hoping by the end of May all four sites will be completely what I envision them to be. Some of them are much further along than the others, but it’s pretty clear what each one will be focusing on.
For my readers here, A Quiet Simple Life | Sallie Borrink has been narrowed down to simple living, homeschooling, homemaking, parenting, gifted/2e, and general Christian faith topics. It will be the peaceful place that so many of us need. People can feel free to interact with the other websites as they choose. There will be links to each of them in the sidebar to make it easy to get to them.
Thank you for your patience as this lazy blogger worked through the creative process in the midst of everything else.










Literal or Figurative Interpretation of Prophecy
I’ve been kind of a “lazy” blogger too lately, but I feel like it’s been off and on for years, actually! I’m a combination of having a lot of things I want to write about for both sites, but other times just thinking I’m not cut out for what online business is and means. I’m not sure if I should keep devoting my precious few work hours to online business if it isn’t making that much money. On the other hand, it *is* my job, and I don’t want to quit. Yet on the OTHER hand, I don’t really want to do all the stuff I need to do to make it work!
Anyway, I enjoy reading your updates on how you’re thinking through things, especially since you’ve been at this so much longer than I have and bring all that perspective with you. I like your narrowed focus for A Quiet Simple Life. I’m sure I’ll check out the other sites from time to time, but to be honest, usually the Rebuilding America type posts pull me into rabbit holes I didn’t really want to go into, and some of the theology posts feel like they’re describing a very different world from mine…I am just not up to date on who various Christian Thought Leaders are or what’s going on culturally for the Church at the moment. The immediate needs and goals around me have sort of created a bubble around me, and I’ve aided that construct myself by intentionally trying to focus on my house, my family, my yard, the people we see every week, the people related to me by blood or marriage. Someday I’m sure my perspective will widen up again, but at the moment I’m living day by day with what’s right in front of me.
Hi Elsie,
It’s good to hear from you! I’m sorry it has taken me several days to reply.
I related to so much of what you wrote in your first paragraph. I know people probably think I didn’t spend any time blogging this week because I didn’t publish anything. I spent HOURS every day doing stuff behind the scenes. I did a a massive site audit with two different services (ahrefs and semrush). It’s overwhelming how much needs to be dealt with. Broken links internally and externally, optimization issues, SEO issues, etc.
I keep trying to psych myself up that I want to work really hard on it this summer and I’m just not getting there. I told a friend this week that I’m too far down the blogging road after 20 years to turn this into a serious commercial endeavor unless I want to delete probably half to two-thirds of my content. I’m not willing to erase or rewrite my story to please others. I do not want to start from scratch to build a website specifically focused on a commercial endeavor.
So I hear you. I don’t have an answer for your situation, but my personal experience has been that I’m much happier as a blogger who simply writes whatever pops into my mind and interacts with readers in the comments as opposed to trying to make it work as a significant commercial enterprise. As you said, I’m thinking “I’m not cut out for what online business is and means.”
Sallie
Ooohhhhhh, what an interesting idea to split these out. In the past I thought about splitting my blog apart to have a Bible lesson blog and a homeschool lessons blog, but I just don’t have the bandwidth to do both, and they’re all aspects of who I am. My homeschooling flows out of my faith, so it would be taking out part of the why if I separated them, and my faith is informed by my love of history and books, so that’s all wrapped up together.
Hi Ticia,
I don’t compartmentalize my life, but I’ve learned over the years that most people do. Coming to terms with that one fact made it possible for me to do it.
The faith component has always been the challenging one. Like you, my faith is the key element in everything. So, for example, writing about Gifted/2e without mentioning my faith failed horribly. I cannot write about my life without mentioning the role my faith plays in it. I can’t write about homeschooling without talking about my faith. So the faith element could never go away.
I finally realized that the faith component I needed to remove from here was the heavier theological and polemics part. What I would call the more “cheerful” and “devotional” faith content can stay here. It fits and no one is going to be bothered by it. The heavier stuff had to go to another website. Now I can write about it whenever I want and the people who are interested can read it. I’ve held back from writing SO MANY POSTS over the past several years because I knew a lot of people didn’t want to read it. Same thing with the politics/current events. I’ve moved that back and forth multiple times. Now that is also in a separate place. People who are interested can go there and I don’t have to hold back what I write or how often I write.
I have tried multiple sites before and failed, largely due to time constraints but also because I resisted compartmentalizing my online life. The time factor is becoming less of an issue now that Caroline is almost done with school. All of these moves this spring were really to set me up for moving forward.
Sallie