Welcome
to
Pearl
Girls™
Mother
of
Pearl
Mother's
Day
blog
series
-‐
a
week
long
celebration
of
moms
and
mothering.
Each
day
will
feature
a
new
post
by
some
of
today's
best
writer's
(Tricia
Goyer,
Sheila
Walsh,
Suzanne
Woods
Fisher,
Bonnie
St.
John,
and
more).
I
hope
you'll
join
us
each
day
for
another
unique
perspective
on
Mother's
Day.
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And
to
all
you
MOMS
out
there,
Happy
Mother's
Day!
Stepping
Out
on
Faith
by
Bonnie
St.
John
"Darcy
.
.
.”
“Yeah,
Mom?”
I
momentarily
held
the
undivided
attention
of
my
teenage
daughter.
Her
thumbs,
free
of
their
ubiquitous
texting
keypad,
quietly
dangled
by
her
side.
Her
computer
and
its
omnipresent
Facebook
page
were
completely
out
of
sight.
I
had
almost
forgotten
what
she
looked
like
without
all
these
adolescent
accoutrements.
As
we
sat
down
together
on
the
burgundy
leather
sofa
in
our
living
room,
I
realized
this
fleeting
state
of
electronic
dislocation
was
my
chance
to
hatch
a
plan
I
had
been
formu-‐
lating
for
the
past
several
weeks.
Carpe
diem.
“How
would
you
like
to
write
a
book
together?”
“About
what?”
I
asked
my
mom.
Write
a
book?
This
was
a
real
surprise.
I
felt
a
bit
suspicious,
but
still
curious.
I
love
to
write,
and
Mom
kept
telling
me
I
was
really
good
at
it.
I
like
writing
poetry,
fantasy,
and
sci-‐fi,
though.
The
books
Mom
wrote
were
all
nonfiction.
I
wondered
what
we
could
possibly
do
together.
“Well
.
.
.”
I
hesitated.
If
I
wanted
her
to
commit
to
any
extra
work
out-‐
side
her
busy
schedule
at
school—not
to
mention
work
alongside
her
mother—I
had
to
make
this
really
great.
“It
would
be
about
women
as leaders,”
I
continued,
“a
mother-‐
daughter
investigation
into
leadership
styles
and
structures.”
“Leadership?”
I
blurted.
It
came
out
as
if
I
had
a
bad
taste
in
my
mouth—which
I
did.
I
couldn’t
imagine
a
more
boring
topic
to
write
about.
What
is
there
to
say
about
leadership
anyway?
When
you’re
in
charge,
you
just
get
things
done,
right?
Who
wants
to
talk
about
that?
Her
furrowed
brow
told
me
I
was
losing
her
fast.
“Um
.
.
.
we
could
find
women
leaders
all
around
the
world!”
I
said
impulsively,
frantically
casting
the
ultimate
bait.
“Really?
Would
we
get
to
travel
a
lot?”
I
hadn’t
thought
about
that.
Heck,
I’d
write
about
the
mating
habits
of
tsetse
flies
if
I
got
to
go
to
Africa
to
do
it!
But
this
project
wasn’t
just
about
the
influence
it
would
have
on
Darcy.
I
wanted
to
do
something
that
could
have
a
potent
impact
on
an
alarming
trend
I
had
witnessed
in
workplaces
across
the
country:
far
too
many
women
appeared
to
be
making
a
choice
not
to
apply
for
top
leadership
positions
when
presented
with
the
opportunities
to
do
so.
This
project,
then,
was
a
bit
of
a
Trojan
horse.
On
the
one
hand,
the
saga
of
a
mother-‐
daughter
journey
could
seduce
female
readers,
who
might
never
bother
to
read
the
Harvard
Business
School
dissertations
on
the
subject,
into
a
meaningful
conversation
about
leadership.
At
the
same
time,
if
Darcy
met
a
series
of
brilliant,
accomplished
women—
people
even
a
cynical
teen
would
be
in
awe
of—perhaps
they
could
tell
her
all
the
things
I’d
like
her
to
know—and
more.
And
she
just
might
listen.
But
where
to
start?
How
would
we
make
it
work?
I
suggested
we
do
most
of
our
research
by
phone,
as
I
did
for
How
Strong
Women
Pray.
My
telephone
interviews
with
a
governor,
some
CEOs,
actors,
sports
figures,
a
college
president,
and
others
yielded
great
stories
and
information.
I
promised
my
intrepid
co-‐author,
though,
that
we
could
punctuate
these
conversations
with
a
few
visits
in
person
to
exciting
and
exotic
places—all
with
reasonably
priced
airfares.
“Why
don’t
we
follow
each
subject
as
she
goes
about
her
daily
life?
That
way
our
readers
get
to
come
along
with
us
and
get
a
behind-‐
the-‐scenes
look
at
what
happens
to
them.
Instead
of
just
a
boring
interview,
we—and
our
readers—get
to
hang
around
with
these
women,
see
them
in
their
natural
habitat,
and
even
see
how
other
people
treat
them.”
Although
I
agreed
it
was
a
wonderful
approach,
this
idea
of
“job-‐
shadowing”
each
featured
subject
wasn’t
going
to
be
easy.
Would
these
high-‐powered,
important
women
deign
to
allow
us
that
kind
of
access?
Would
they
be
able
to
impart
the
kind
of
wisdom
that
would
resonate
with
our
readers
and
truly
make
a
difference
in
their
lives?
We
looked
at
each
other,
both
of
us
hooked
on
a
crazy
idea
that
we
weren’t
sure
we
could
pull
off.
“It
sounds
impossible,
Darcy,”
I
said.
“We
might
as
well
get
started.”
And
so,
we
stepped
out
.
.
.
on
faith.
Exciting News – the latest Pearl Girls book, Mother of Pearl: Luminous Legacies and Iridescent Faith will be released this month! Please visit the Pearl Girls Facebook Page (and LIKE us!) for more information! Thanks so much for your support!
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