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Stephanie Nielson

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Pen name
  
NieNie

Name
  
Stephanie Nielson

Occupation
  
Mother, Housemaker

Role
  
Blogger

Language
  
English

Siblings
  
C. Jane Kendrick

Nationality
  
American


Stephanie Nielson 2bpblogspotcommJljZYHPA0QSKYXe4uUlIAAAAAAA


Born
  
Stephanie Aurora Clark June 27, 1981 (age 42) (
1981-06-27
)

Notable awards
  
Blogluxe Most Inspiring Blog 2009

Children
  
Claire, Jane, Oliver, Nicholas, and Charlotte

Spouse
  
Christian Nielson (m. 2000)

Books
  
Heaven Is Here: An Incredible Story of Hope, Triumph, and Everyday Joy

Parents
  
Stephen D. Clark, Cynthia J. Clark

Nominations
  
Goodreads Choice Awards Best Memoir & Autobiography

Stephanie nielson remarks world congress of families ix


Stephanie Nielson is a Mormon mommy blogger, burn survivor, and author of the blog "The NieNie Dialogues". She is also the younger sister of another popular blogger, C. Jane Kendrick.

Contents

Stephanie Nielson NieNie Lovers Stephanie Nielson39s Marriage Before the

Person 2 person stephanie nielson


Plane crash and recovery

In 2008, Nielson was in a serious plane crash with her husband Christian and burned over 80% of her body. She was in a coma for three months and then underwent multiple surgeries, skin grafts, and physical therapy in a painful, ongoing treatment regimen. Her recovery process led to a large increase in publicity including interviews with Oprah Winfrey, TODAY, and a popular YouTube "Mormon Message" video for the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

A year after her accident, she hiked the "Y", a rocky path near her parents' house, with her family and dozens of fans to demonstrate how far she had come.

Blogging style, fanbase, and appeal

Nielson is known for her positive approach to life, especially motherhood, influenced in part by her strong religious convictions. Her fans credit her with inspiring them to become better mothers and for "portraying motherhood as a celebration, not a grind" as well as "...'the highest calling on earth: a job full of color and vibrancy and of the utmost importance.'"

As with many other Mormon mommy bloggers, Nielson has attracted attention for her large base of readers who are either not Mormon, not mothers, or both. A recent Salon article entitled "Why I Can't Stop Reading Mormon Housewife Blogs", by Emily Matchar, a self-described "young, feminist atheist who can't bake a cupcake" but is "addicted" to several Mormon housewife blogs, including Nielson's, examined this interesting phenomena.

"So why, exactly, are these blogs so fascinating to women like us -- secular, childless women who may have never so much as baked a cupcake, let alone reupholstered our own ottomans with thrifted fabric and vintage grosgrain ribbon?...to use a word that makes me cringe, these blogs are weirdly "uplifting." To read Mormon lifestyle blogs is to peer into a strange and fascinating world where the most fraught issues of modern living -- marriage and child rearing -- appear completely unproblematic. This seems practically subversive to someone like me, weaned on an endless media parade of fretful stories about "work-life balance" and soaring divorce rates and the perils of marrying too young/too old/too whatever.".

In response, MMB (Mormon Mommy Blogs) argued that although the article was right that these blogs provided something missing in other people's lives, this missing piece was spiritual.

"We told the producer that it's easy to learn about people through their blogs. You are getting to peek inside their homes, you are getting to see how other people are living. And not only that, but those Mormons, that you've only heard weird myths about, are out there, talking, and you're finding, that they are regular people. These are regular women, who[m] you admire. These are people just. like. you.Some of them stay at home, some of them work. But they do it all with a grace and greater understanding of their purpose...When we write about our personal struggles, we do so in a respectful and uplifting way. Yes, we struggle with depression. Yes, we argue with our husbands. Yes, our children even drive us nuts.... But through all of that, the readers of Mormon mommy blogs feel the love...Mormon Mommy Bloggers are a powerful force for good in this world, and they are spreading that goodness by sharing their lives through their blogs. "

This interpretation would likely be close to Nielson's own, as she noted on a Mormon radio interview, among other places that she felt her readers were reaching the spirit of God through her writings. Blogging is highly popular (and officially encouraged) among Mormons as a way extending the Mormon community and of spreading the divine word, and the resulting community of Mormon blogs has come to be known as the Bloggernacle.

Projects and causes

Nielson has supported a variety of projects and causes. She promotes the LDS Church and sends a copy of The Book of Mormon to any reader who requests it. Politically, Nielson campaigned for and encouraged her blog readers to support Mitt Romney in the 2012 US presidential election.

Nielson published her first book, Heaven is Here, in the spring of 2012.

References

Stephanie Nielson Wikipedia