Do you feel caught up in the rat race, overextended, or just lost? Start by building a family and household culture that encourages doing something about it.
Spiritual growth. Financial planning. Education. Health. Employment. Food. In the western world, we've handed all of it to professionals with a degree. In doing so, we've partially lost the ability to think critically, follow God's call, and exercise real ownership over our lives, our families, and our God-given creative abilities.
Real home renovation projects, practical how-tos, and the mindset behind building a home that your family actually lives in. No contractors required — just the confidence to do it yourself.
Follow on Instagram →A shared digital budget system built on Biblical money principles. Two logins, one household, real clarity. Built by a husband and wife who paid off their mortgage on a single income — then built the tool to help others do the same.
Learn about the app →A newsletter about what it means to build things — a house, a family, a creative life — and why it matters. Not a how-to. The thinking behind the doing. For families ready to go deeper than tips and tactics.
Read & Subscribe →In building a family legacy, the foundation is a home your family thrives in and clarity and peace of mind around money. When those two things are in place, everything else becomes possible. When they're not, everything else is harder than it needs to be.
As our world becomes more automated and overloaded with information, there is no greater time to reclaim ownership of your life. You don't have to follow the script. You can build whatever life you want — but it requires not being afraid, choosing to try new things, and following what God has placed in your heart.
The world tells us how to live, where the end goal justifies their means. That philosophy is rooted in a humanistic approach to life and has gospel-centered families confused and lost. There is a better way. It starts with your home, your household, and your willingness to do it yourself.
Practical things. Countercultural things. Things that seem simple but compound over time into a family culture that is deeply rooted, deeply free, and deeply purposeful.
Teach your kids to make things with their hands and cultivate a home that encourages creating over consuming.
Read good books that engage the full complexity of life rather than dumbing things down to an easy answer.
Help your kids follow their giftings and cultivate a genuine love of learning over a love of performance.
Be intentional about what you eat and what medicine you put in your body for your long-term health.
Teach them the ways of God. Model a love for Jesus and emotional fluency through awareness and regulation.
Do more things yourself. Farm things out only when you must — not as a default.
Set a financial path that lets your family thrive and gives you the flexibility to follow wherever God calls you.
Model for your family a love for God and his ways — and the freedom that comes from living in alignment with them.
Pick one area and go deeper. The home. The budget. The thinking behind it all. It doesn't matter where you start — it matters that you do.