• Ariel as a Pirate, Altered Coloring Book Art #4: I’m given The Little Mermaid a makeover. A coloring idea for stress relief and sparking creativity. Reimagined Coloring Pages with Disney princesses. | cassiecreley.com
    Create

    Ariel as a Pirate – Altered Coloring Book Art #4

    Time for new altered coloring book art! I’m reimaging a new coloring book page. Today I’m sharing how I changed the look of the heroine of my favorite Disney movie: The Little Mermaid. (Find my other makeovers of Disney Princesses here.) 

    I decided this was a good week for a lighthearted post. If you’ve been following what’s going on on the West Coast, we’ve been having unprecedented wildfires. I’ve never heard of so many brushfires and wildfires so close by, and a large one in Washington is in a neighboring city. I have several friends and family who are waiting to hear if they need to evacuate. We’re praying for everyone affected and fighting the fires, and I appreciate your prayers for the West Coast as well!

    We could all use some stress-relieving coloring…

  • Popsicle Cards Finished
    Create

    Easy Popsicle Cards

    Summer is my favorite season, and I’m quick to point out that it lasts until September 21. So there’s still plenty of time to send summery greeting cards! This design for a popsicle card is quick, easy, and so cheerful.

    I love thinking up new ways to be creative in spite of my health issues and fatigue. Cards are a great craft project that doesn’t use too much energy.

  • The Helpful Chart My Doctor Recommended I Create: Prepare for a doctor's visit. Tips on putting information together for doctor’s appointments. Here’s how reviewing your supplements and medications and other health information can help you and your doctor work together on your treatment plan. Especially useful if you have multiple chronic illnesses or health conditions.
    Health

    The Helpful Chart My Doctor Recommended I Create

    Do you ever discover a useful resource for your health that just makes you want to share it? That’s the way I felt when my doctor recommended I create this chart. This is a helpful way to prepare for a doctor’s visit. It led to a lot of light bulb moments as I considered the future direction of my treatment plan, especially when it comes to medication and supplements.

    This chart will help you streamline appointments by having more information at your fingertips, whether you’re meeting with your doctor in person or doing televisits. (I’ve actually found televisits practical because I use up less energy and can pull up documents about my health history on my computer…or ask my mom to run into the next room to check the dosage on my supplements, LOL! What do you guys think of them?)  

    I feel I’ve hit a dead end with my health and haven’t been seeing improvement (so I’ve been trying to focus on the little things I can do).

    That’s why I recently saw my naturopathic oncologist to get a new perspective. I hadn’t seen him in awhile—I had thyroid cancer three years ago and have other chronic health conditions including dysautonomia, fibromyalgia, an autoimmune disease, and asthma.

  • Longing for Light: An Example of Mythology Pointing to Jesus – I love a lot of myths, but I find the best ones have a beautiful truth underlying the story. I want to explore an example of mythology pointing to Jesus and how every human heart longs for light to vanquish darkness, and for good to overcome evil. | cassiecreley.com
    Blog,  Faith

    Longing for Light: An Example of Mythology Pointing to Jesus

    Ever since I was little, I’ve loved reading mythology. The epic stories, heroic deeds, and imaginative worlds captured my imagination and solidified my love for fantasy books. But even better is when you can tell there is a beautiful truth underlying myths. I want to explore an example of mythology pointing to Jesus and how every human heart longs for light to vanquish darkness—a timeless theme of good overcoming evil.

    I love when mythology points out a universal theme. In dark times, we ache for the arrival of dawn.

    This seems especially relevant right now, as we’re all longing for a little more light in the world. Things have been pretty dark lately, what with the pandemic, racial injustice, divisiveness and more. So where can we turn as we’re looking for light?

    Tricky Characters and Myths about Light

    The examples from mythology I want to look at all tell the story of rebel gods stealing fire or light to bring it down to earth.

  • Q&A with blogger Olivia Wolfertz: “I would encourage someone going through a chronic illness to see themselves as valuable and brave even despite their limits.” On practicing contentment, choosing what to focus on, an pursuing creativity with Lyme disease, chronic pain and fatigue. (Invisible Illness Visible Worth Interview Project) | cassiecreley.com
    Invisible Illness / Visible Worth Interviews

    Q&A with Olivia Wolfertz: “I would encourage someone going through a chronic illness to see themselves as valuable and brave even despite their limits.”

    Olivia Wolfertz runs the blog Unpolished Ponderings, where she shares her love of Jesus and creativity, plus a hopeful outlook on life with chronic illness. I feel so blessed that this Invisible Illness, Visible Worth interview project continues to let me connect with kindred spirits who love stories, creating, and writing!

    Olivia created her blogging platform a few years ago as a way to document and cope with her illnesses, including Lyme disease. It’s grown into an outlet where she loves to share what she’s been making lately and what’s encouraging her.

  • Q&A with Beth Madison: “You are more than your disease. You can be defined by your disease or you can be defined by trusting God with your disease.” Interview on patient advocacy, God’s trustworthiness, and life with health conditions including rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. (Invisible Illness Visible Worth Interview Project) | cassiecreley.com
    Invisible Illness / Visible Worth Interviews

    Q&A with Beth Madison: “You are more than your disease. You can be defined by your disease or you can be defined by trusting God with your disease.”

    Beth Madison teaches biology at Union University and is a patient advocate through Global Healthy Living Foundation. Over the last eight years, her health journey has included rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, as well as other chronic illness.

    I love the story Beth shares in this interview about friends who are wonderful examples of what it looks like to faithfully support someone with invisible illness, as well as her examples of how God proves Himself trustworthy over and over again.

    I hope you’re encouraged by this conversation with Beth on chronic illness, faith, and perseverance.

  • Ups And Downs: Summer, Chronic Illness, and a New Normal: July Linkup—Here’s what is helping me adjust to the new normal, plus an update on how I’m while dealing with health flare ups and making time for creativity. This month’s themes: Bothering, Demanding, Telecommunicating, Tolerating, and Nourishing
    Blog,  Health

    Ups And Downs: Summer, Chronic Illness, and a New Normal

    Hello friends, I’m so excited to be able to join A Chronic Voice’s link up this month. Summer is finally here, but unfortunately, that doesn’t mean a vacation from chronic illness. So I’m going to share what I’ve found helpful and how I’m coping with the new normal.

    This link up is a way for chronic illness bloggers to connect by writing posts based on the same prompts. I found it so helpful last month to use the prompts as a jumping off point to not only write a blog post, but also to do some journaling for myself to process everything going on in the world and my own life.

    This month, I’m using the prompts to share a little bit about what I’ve been up to lately creatively, what I’ve been struggling with healthwise, and how I’m continuing to adjust to the new normal.

    The prompts for this month are Bothering, Demanding, Telecommunicating, Tolerating, and Nourishing.

  • Q&A with author Daphne Self: “Never give up. There is always someone out there that understands.” Interview on writing, challenges of chronic illness, and leaning on God for self worth when living with fibromyalgia, IBS, Interstitial Cystitis, Neuropathy, and autoimmune disease. (Invisible Illness Visible Worth Interview Project) | cassiecreley.com
    Invisible Illness / Visible Worth Interviews

    Q&A with author Daphne Self: “Never give up. There is always someone out there that understands.”

    Daphne Self is an author whose books include fiction, a devotional, and soon, a book about living well with chronic illness. In this interview, Daphne shares how she uses her love of writing to encourage others and point them to Jesus, all while dealing with one of the worst cases of fibromyalgia pain her doctor has seen.

    Daphne’s fourth book was just released this June. You can check out Alabama Days, the second book in a series, here. The book follows a paramedic, who has seen too much suffering to believe God can be good, and a reporter who both get caught up investigating a series of suspicious accidents.

    Her nonfiction book on chronic illness will be available this fall—it will chronicle the ups and downs she went through when she was first diagnosed with fibromyalgia and chronic pain.

    I hope you’re encouraged by this conversation with Daphne on chronic illness, faith, and perseverance.