The 15-Minute Company Plan: What Actually Matters When Someone's Coming Over
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A proposito di questo titolo
Do you long to invite people into your life but feel like your house just isn't ready? Maybe you're mid-project, mid-clutter, or mid-life chaos, and the thought of having someone over feels overwhelming. If that's you, this episode offers the permission and practical strategies you need to start practicing hospitality right where you are.
What You'll Discover in This Episode
Sue Donaldson, author of Never Alone: Stories of Invitation and Connection, joins Kathi Lipp to share how she maintained a life of hospitality even during a 13-year home remodel—complete with Tyvek paper windows and mice running down the hall. Her stories will make you laugh, tear up, and most importantly, feel empowered to open your door.
The Difference Between Hospitality and Entertaining
There's a crucial distinction that changes everything: entertaining focuses on impressing people, while hospitality focuses on meeting their needs. When we understand that hospitality is about the guest—not our perfectly styled home—we're free to invite people in regardless of our circumstances.
Why Planning Creates Freedom
Sue Donaldson shares how simple preparation (like keeping frozen cookie dough logs ready) allows her to focus on guests rather than frantically preparing. When the food and basics are planned, you have the mental space to truly connect with the people at your table.
The 15-Minute Company-Ready Plan
What can you realistically accomplish when a friend texts that they're stopping by? Sue Donaldson and Kathi Lipp break down the essentials: clean bathrooms and kitchen counters, folded afghans, fluffed pillows, and coffee brewing. That's it. Your guests truly don't notice the 15 things you wish you'd gotten to.
Hospitality Beyond Your Home
When your house simply isn't in a hosting space, there are beautiful alternatives: porch hospitality, third-place connections, offering to sit together at church, dropping soup on a friend's porch, or simply texting "I can pray right now." Connection doesn't require a dining room table.
Key Takeaways
- Hospitality is a commandment—and God provides the strength when we obey
- The more you practice hospitality, the more at ease you become
- Your 15-minute prep is more about making YOU comfortable than impressing guests
- Chocolate helps make a friend (keep frozen cookie dough ready!)
- Create the invitation that matches who you are right now
Whether you're in a season of renovation, health challenges, or just everyday chaos, you can still live a life of invitation. Your imperfect home might be exactly the place someone needs to feel seen and welcomed.