May 5
The Art of 'Quiet Hospitality' for Overwhelmed Families
Hospitality has become a performance nobody asked for. Quiet hospitality asks us to show up as we are and let others do the same.
Spring · May
from a small garden south of Salt Lake
Family discipleship, honest motherhood, and the slow work of making a home, written at the kitchen table by Rachel Whitaker.
Lately on the kitchen table
read more →A note from Rachel
LDS Family Life is a publication about LDS family life, motherhood, marriage, homemaking, and practical gospel living for families who want faith at home to feel lived instead of staged. I write first-person essays on family discipleship, spiritual formation in ordinary routines, and the pressures families are trying to carry with steadiness and grace.
The sink full of mixing bowls. The garden row that finally came up. The child calling for one more glass of water. The prayer I whisper while scraping plates after dinner. Those are the things that hold a family, and they feel worth writing down before they slip past.
with love, Rachel
Essays
May 5
Hospitality has become a performance nobody asked for. Quiet hospitality asks us to show up as we are and let others do the same.
May 5
The low-stakes family council is not about the agenda. It is about the rhythm of gathering. The rhythm itself does the work.
May 5
The first thirty minutes after a child comes home are for decompression only. No questions, no demands. Just space and a soft place to land.
May 5
We turned scripture study into something it was never meant to be. A performance instead of a presence. It turns out there is another way.
May 4
Hospitality does not require a clean house or the ability to stand. It requires an open heart and the willingness to receive someone as they are.
May 4
Most family meetings fail because the stakes are too high. Building the habit of gathering starts with low stakes, small decisions, and real listening.
May 4
The transition to the Sabbath is not automatic. It has to be built, ritual by ritual. Building it is itself a form of worship.
May 4
The messy middle of parenting is where the real spiritual work happens. In the gap between who we want to be and who we are in a Tuesday meltdown.
May 3
The first moments of reconnection after work set the tone for the whole evening. Learning to come home with intention instead of collision.
May 3
Wiping the same table for twelve years taught me that the mundane rhythms of motherhood are not distractions from spiritual growth. They are the growth.
FAQ