Thursday, August 31, 2006

The Letter


She jumped up as soon as she saw the surgeon
come out of the operating room. She said: "How is
my little boy? Is he going to be all right?
When can I see him?"

The surgeon said, "I'm sorry. We did all we could,
but your boy didn't make it."

Sally said, "Why do little children get cancer?
Doesn't God care any more? Where were you,
God, when my son needed you?"

The surgeon asked, "Would you like some time
alone with your son? One of the nurses will be out
in a few minutes, before he's transported to the
university."

Sally asked the nurse to stay with her while she
said good-bye to son. She ran her fingers lovingly
through his thick red curly hair.

"Would you like a lock of his hair?" the nurse
asked. Sally nodded yes.

The nurse cut a lock of the boy's hair, put it in a
plastic bag and handed it to Sally. The mother said,
"It was Jimmy's idea to donate his body to the University
for Study. He said it might help somebody else.

"I said no at first, but Jimmy said, 'Mom, I won't be using it
after I die. Maybe it will help some other little boy spend
one more day with his Mom."

She went on, "My Jimmy had a heart of gold. Always thinking of
someone else. Always wanting to help others if he could."

Sally walked out of Children's mercy Hospital for
the last time, after spending most of the last six
months there. She put the bag with Jimmy's
belongings on the seat beside her in the car.

The drive home was difficult. It was even harder to
enter the empty house. She carried Jimmy's belongings,
and the plastic bag with the lock of his hair to her
son's room.

She started placing the model cars and other personal things
back in his room exactly where he had always kept them. She laid
down across his bed and, hugging his pillow, cried herself to sleep.

It was around midnight when Sally awoke. Laying beside her on the
bed was a folded letter.

The letter said:

"Dear Mom, I know you're going to miss me; but
don't think that I will ever forget you, or stop
loving you, just 'cause I'm not around to say I LOVE
YOU. I will always love you, Mom, even more with
each day. Someday we will see each other again.

Until then, if you want to adopt a little boy so you
won't be so lonely, that's okay with me. He can
have my room and old stuff to play with. But, if you
decide to get a girl instead, she probably wouldn't
like the same things us boys do. You'll have to buy
her dolls and stuff girls like, you know.

Don't be sad thinking about me. This really is a neat place.
Grandma and Grandpa met me as soon as I got here and showed me
around some, but it will take a long time to see everything.

The angels are so cool. I love to watch them fly. And, you know
what? Jesus doesn't look like any of his pictures. Yet, when I saw
Him, I knew it was Him. Jesus himself took me to see GOD!

And guess what, Mom? I got to sit on God's knee and talk to Him,
like I was somebody important. That's when I told Him that I wanted
to write you a letter, to tell you good-bye and everything. But I
already knew that wasn't allowed.

Well, you know what Mom? God handed me some paper and His own
personal pen to write you this letter. I think Gabriel is the
name of the angel who is going to drop this letter off to you.

God said for me to give you the answer to one of the questions you
asked Him 'Where was He when I needed him?' "God said He was in the
same place with me, as when His son Jesus was on the cross. He was
right there, as He always is with all His children.

Oh, by the way, Mom, no one else can see what I've written except you.
To everyone else this is just a blank piece of paper. Isn't that cool?

I have to give God His pen back now. He needs it to write some more
names in the Book of Life. Tonight I get to sit at the table with Jesus
for supper. I'm sure the food will be great.

Oh, I almost forgot to tell you. I don't hurt anymore.
The cancer is all gone. I'm glad because I couldn't
stand that pain anymore and God couldn't stand to
see me hurt so much, either. That's when He sent
The Angel of Mercy to come get me.

The Angel said I was a Special Delivery! How about that?

Signed with Love from God, Jesus & Me.

When you're down to nothing, God is up to something.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Desire To Please


"My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the
road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor
do I really know myself, and the fact that I think I am following
your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe
that the desire to please you does in fact please you."
~Thomas Merton

Mercy


My name is Mercy. I have now been single 5 1/2 years. I was from a Christian background, but always suffered from rejection issues. I craved attention from men. I already had a 2yr son. So, it was quite easy to be taken by a man professing interest in Christianity.

He claimed to be a good dad to his exes children. He loved my son. It wasn't until I was six months pregnant that I found out that he was still married to his ex. By then he was back into the drugs that he was supposedly clean from.

At first it was just the verbal abuse. Nobody would want me with 2 kids. I couldn't cook right, clean right, have sex right. I was raised messed up because I was a Christian. Normal people look at porn. Normal people get high, etc.

Then the physical abuse started around the time my youngest son was one. In an argument over who did laundry last, I got hit. I kicked him, it landed in a sensitive area (unintentionally) . Next thing I knew, I was on the floor.

His hands were wrapped around my throat. Afterwards he cried and begged my forgiveness. Usually he just hit or broke things. He threatened to choke me one other time because I told someone the truth. He threw things at me.

The marijuana use was sporadic. He couldn't keep a job. And then he'd spend our last three dollars on Taco Bell for him, while my son and I (while pregnant) had only tortillas with butter.

Looking back I strongly suspect other drugs. Staying up for 3 days, keeping the garage locked so that I couldn't get in. He had a baby monitor hidden under the couch so that he could listen to my conversations from the garage.

When I saw that my son was no longer the happy kid who loved everbody, and was afraid of the man he knew as dad I decided to leave. Then one day it happened. A situation where I suspected that I was going to get a beating after he got home from work.

I left and never went back. If he knows where I am, he has made no contact. I don't know where he is. I stayed unlisted for awhile. About a year ago, I finally felt the fear gone. I no longer worry about him stealing my son. I think he would have located us by now if he wanted to.

I will never try to get child support from him, because that would notify him where I was. He wouldn't hold a job long enough for me to get it anyway. I have found out many things about myself since leaving.

I am strong. I can cook. I can provide myself with a better life. I am going to school to be a midwife. Something that I wanted to do since before I met him.

I own my own home through Habitat for Humanity. I have friends, something I wasn't allowed before. I get to decorate my house. God has blessed me after my long, hard journey.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Hello, My Child


Good Morning, Cherished One!

This is God speaking.

I will be handling all your problems today.

I will not need your worry, only your trust.

So move everything on your worry list,

To your prayer list.

Then watch your praise list grow faster than the worry list.

I am ready to help you.

Read my love letter to you (the Bible).

Any part of it will do.

Talk with me, not TO me.

Do what I say. Obey me and you'll be glad you did.

Have a good day!

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

The Room


17-year-old Brian Moore had only a short time to write something for a class. The subject was what Heaven was like. "I wowed 'em," he later told his father, Bruce. "It's a killer. It's the best thing I ever wrote." It also was the last.

Brian's parents had forgotten about the essay when a cousin found it while cleaning out the teenager's locker at Teary Valley High School. Brian had been dead only hours, but his parents desperately wanted every piece of his life near them-notes from classmates and teachers, his homework.

Only two months before, he had handwritten the essay about encountering Jesus in a file room full of cards detailing every moment of the teen's life. But it was only after Brian's death that Beth and Bruce Moore realized that their son had described his view of heaven. "It makes such an impact that people want to share it. You feel like you are there." Mr. Moore said.

Brian Moore died May 27, 1997, the day after Memorial Day. He was driving home from a friend's house when his car went off Bulen-Pierce Road in Pickaway County and struck a utility pole. He emerged from the wreck unharmed but stepped on a downed power line and was electrocuted.

The Moores framed a copy of Brian's essay and hung it among the family portraits in the living room. "I think God used him to make a point. I think we were meant to find it and make something out of it," Mrs. Moore said of the essay. She and her husband want to share their son's vision of life after death. "I'm happy for Brian. I know he's in heaven. I know I'll see him."

Brian's Essay: The Room...

In that place between wakefulness and dreams, I found myself in the room. There were no distinguishing features except for the one wall covered with small index card files. They were like the ones in libraries that list titles by author or subject in alphabetical order. But these files, which stretched from floor to ceiling and seemingly endless in either direction, had very different headings. As I drew near the wall of files, the first to catch my attention was one that read "Girls I have liked." I opened it and began flipping through the cards. I quickly shut it, shocked to realize that I recognized the names written on each one. And then without being told, I knew exactly where I was.

This lifeless room with its small files was a crude catalog system for my life. Here were written the actions of my every moment, big and small, in a detail my memory couldn't match. A sense of wonder and curiosity, coupled with horror, stirred within me as I began randomly opening files and exploring their content. Some brought joy and sweet memories; others a sense of shame and regret so intense that I would look over my shoulder to see if anyone was watching.

A file named "Friends" was next to one marked "Friends I have betrayed." The titles ranged from the mundane to the outright weird "Books I Have Read," "Lies I Have Told," "Comfort I have Given," "Jokes I Have Laughed at." Some were almost hilarious in their exactness: "Things I've yelled at my brothers." Others I couldn't laugh at: "Things I Have Done in My Anger", "Things I Have Muttered Under My Breath at My Parents." I never ceased to be surprised by the contents.

Often there were many more cards than I expected. Sometimes fewer than I hoped. I was overwhelmed by the sheer volume of the life I had lived. Could it be possible that I had the time in my years to fill each of these thousands or even millions of cards? But each card confirmed this truth. Each was written in my own handwriting. Each signed with my signature.

When I pulled out the file marked "TV Shows I have watched", I realized the files grew to contain their contents. The cards were packed tightly, and yet after two or three yards, I hadn't found the end of the file. I shut it, shamed, not so much by the quality of shows but more by the vast wasted time I knew that file represented.

When I came to a file marked "Lustful Thoughts," I felt a chill run through my body. I pulled the file out only an inch, not willing to test its size and drew out a card. I shuddered at its detailed content.

I felt sick to think that such a moment had been recorded. An almost animal rage broke on me. One thought dominated my mind: No one must ever see these cards! No one must ever see this room! I have to destroy them!" In insane frenzy I yanked the file out. Its size didn't matter now. I had to empty it and burn the cards. But as I took it at one end and began pounding it on the floor, I could not dislodge a single card. I became desperate and pulled out a card, only to find it as strong as steel when I tried to tear it.

Defeated and utterly helpless, I returned the file to its slot. Leaning my forehead against the wall, I let out a long, self-pitying sigh.

And then I saw it.. The title was "People I Have Shared the Gospel With." The handle was brighter than those around it, newer, almost unused. I pulled on its handle and a small box not more than three inches long fell into my hands. I could count the cards it contained on one hand.

And then the tears came. I began to weep. Sobs so deep that they hurt. They started in my stomach and shook through me. I fell on my knees and cried. I cried out of shame, from the overwhelming shame of it all. The rows of file shelves swirled in my tear-filled eyes. No one must ever, ever know of this room. I must lock it up and hide the key. But then as I pushed away the tears, I saw Him.

No, please not Him. Not here. Oh, anyone but Jesus. I watched helplessly as He began to open the files and read the cards. I couldn't bear to watch His response. And in the moments I could bring myself to look at His face, I saw a sorrow deeper than my own.

He seemed to intuitively go to the worst boxes. Why did He have to read every one? Finally He turned and looked at me from across the room. He looked at me with pity in His eyes. But this was a pity that didn't anger me. I dropped my head, covered my face with my hands and began to cry again. He walked over and put His arm around me. He could have said so many things. But He didn't say a word. He just cried with me.

Then He got up and walked back to the wall of files. Starting at one end of the room, He took out a file and, one by one, began to sign His name over mine on each card. "No!" I shouted rushing to Him. All I could find to say was "No, no," as I pulled the card from Him. His name shouldn't be on these cards. But there it was, written in red so rich, so dark, so alive. The name of Jesus covered mine. It was written with His blood. He gently took the card back. He smiled a sad smile and began to sign the cards. I don't think I'll ever understand how He did it so quickly, but the next instant it seemed I heard Him close the last file and walk back to my side.

He placed His hand on my shoulder and said, "It is finished." I stood up, and He led me out of the room. There was no lock on its door. There were still cards to be written.

"I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me."-Phil. 4:13 "For God so loved the world that He gave His only son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life." If you feel the same way forward it to as many people as you can so the love of Jesus will touch their lives also. My "People I shared the gospel with" file just got bigger, how about yours?

More Valuable


There was once a wise woman traveling in the mountains who found a
precious stone in a stream. The next day she met another traveler
who was hungry, and she opened her bag to share her food. The
hungry traveler saw the precious stone and asked if she might give
it to him. She did so without hesitation. The traveler left,
rejoicing in his good fortune. He knew the stone was worth enough
to give him security for a lifetime. But only a few days later he
came back to return the stone to the woman who had given it to him.

"I've been thinking," he said, "I know how valuable the stone is,
but I'm giving it back in the hope that you can give me something
even more precious. I want you to give me what you have within you
that enabled you to give me the stone."

-Author Unknown

Sometimes in our continual drive to get ahead, we forget that the
those things we gather around us, no matter how precious they might
seem, pale in comparison to the love and light we hold within.

Turtle Crossing


"Behold the turtle. He makes progress only when he sticks his neck out."
– James Bryant Conant

Monday, August 21, 2006

Hang On


"When I despair, I remember that all through history, the ways of
truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants and
murderers and, for a time, they can seem invincible, but in the end
they always fall. Think of it...always."
-Mahatma Ghandi

Often, when we are in the midst of turmoil, and all around us is
spinning out of control, it is diffcult to believe the storms of
life will ever pass. In such times as this, we can, it seems, do
nothing but tie a knot in the end of our rope and hang on. And this
is all we need to do. We need only to hang on to love, hang on to
light and hang on to truth. For when the storm has passed -- and
they always do -- these three will remain, as strong and certain
and invincible as they have been since time began. As Ghandi said,
love always wins.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Should I Stay?


Should you stay or should you go?

Signs that your relationship is over, or is in serious trouble...

There are vital relationship signs that indicate your relationship is in trouble and it might be better for you, and your partner, if you end it. Here’s how to know.

Toxic disrespect.
Putting you down, outrageous flirting that makes you feel uncomfortable and humiliated and hurtful remarks that aren’t easily forgotten are signs you partner lacks respect for you. You need to be clear about what you will and will not tolerate from your partner. If your partner does not respect you - it's time to go.

Abuse.
Your partner should be there to pick you up when you're down – not put the boot in. If your partner is physically, or emotionally abusive, negative and critical - you don't need to put up with it. And remember that physical abuse is a criminal offence.

No Trust.
Trust is vital. Some relationships therapists say it's the backbone of a healthy relationship. If you can't believe what your partner is telling you – because they have lied too many times before – your relationship will stagnate and die. You don’t want to spend the rest of your life wondering if they are telling the truth. Let them know that if they can't keep their word, then you have only one word for them – "goodbye".

On and off.
If you keep splitting up with your boyfriend/girlfriend it's a sign there is something very wrong. Frequent bust-ups, in the early days indicate there is great chemistry, but little else. Try to work on communicating, without exploding. If, after persistent effort, nothing is changing and the lows outweigh the highs, it may be time to move on.

If you are trying to make the decision of whether to stay in or leave the relationship by yourself, your answers to these questions will give you a lot of insight into what decision is best for you.

1) Why am I considering leaving this relationship?

When things get tough, most everyone has had the thought roll through their minds at some time or another that maybe they might be better off without their partner. Although this question seems obvious, reflecting on it will shed light on how deep your pain is in this relationship.

2) What is the real reason you are considering leaving this relationship?

There's always a reason underneath what you say is the problem. This question is not to trivialize your answers to the first question but rather to ask you to delve deeper. For example, if Susie had been asked this question about her previous marriage, she would have answered the first question with - “We no longer have the same interests, the passion has gone out of the marriage and we seem to be leading separate lives.” After going deeper, she would have said, “I realize I will never get the love that I want in this relationship.”

3) What are the most important things you need to consider in order to make this decision?

You might want to consider housing for you and your children, financial concerns, health concerns, or other life circumstances. An example of this may be: “If I leave (or stay in) this relationship, I won't be able to attend college and that is an important goal of mine.”

4) How will the other people in my life be affected if I stay or leave and can I deal with that?

We never know how others will be affected when we make a decision of this magnitude. While we need to consider how this decision will impact them, the ultimate, conscious choice should be ours and ours alone.

5) If children are involved, will they be able to see a better example of love in action if you stay or if you leave?

Considering how staying in or leaving a relationship affects the children is usually a major consideration for anyone in this situation. We feel that this is an important question to answer to help you focus on the current and future welfare of your children.

6) Are there any commitments or agreements you will be breaking if you decide to leave this relationship and how do you feel about that?

A marriage commitment is an obvious example of this. Examining your beliefs, including religious beliefs, about commitments is an important consideration as you make your way to your decision.

7) How important is love to you compared to other things in your life?

We're asking you to look at your values when you answer this question. For example: If you are considering leaving, is having the love you want more important to you than keeping your current lifestyle or home?

8) Is there any chance the two of you will be able to heal the issues surrounding this relationship?

Ask yourself if both of you are willing to do what is necessary to break down the walls and heal what is happening between the two of you.

9) How have you changed since you entered into this relationship and how have your wants, needs, and desire for what you want in a relationship changed?

Taking an honest look at how you have changed will help you to see if your partner is the kind of person you want to be in a relationship with today.

10) What is the biggest payoff if you were to stay in this relationship and what is the payoff if you were to leave?

Honestly considering what you would be getting out of each of these scenarios will help you to determine what is right for you.

Just A Widow Joke


Two women were in a hair salon talking about their home lives when the subject of flighty husbands came up.

"It's unbelievable," one woman said. "I can never figure out where he goes at night."

"I know exactly what you mean," said the other woman. "One second he's in the house, and the next he's gone without a trace."

"Well," said a woman eavesdropping nearby. "I always know where my husband is."

"How do you manage that?" the other two women asked.

"Easy," she replied. "I'm a widow."

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Helping Others


Friends can help each other. A true friend is someone who lets you have total freedom to be yourself-and especially to feel. Or, not feel. Whatever you happen to be feeling at the moment is fine with them. That's what real love amounts to-letting a person be what he really is.
-Jim Morrison

You see, we are here, as far as I can tell, to help each other; our brothers, our sisters, our friends, our enemies. That is to help each other and not hurt each other. And sometimes to help them we have got to help ourselves. So that we will know that they are around in the first place.

Its a big world out there; with enough pain and misery in it; without me going around and helping it out by hurting myself; and consequently, those that care about me.
What I am trying to get across to you; is please take of yourselves and those that you love; because that is what we are here for, that's all we got, and that is all we can take with us. Are you with me ?”
-Stevie Ray Vaughan

"Our job is not to straighten each other out, But to help each other up."
-Neva Cole

“I like peace, not violence. The people see that, and perhaps that is why they respect me...If we are human beings, then we have to help each other..."
-Panchito Ramírez

"It is only when we help each other that we can fly."
-Luciano de Crescenzo

When we hurt each other we should write it down in the sand, so the winds of forgiveness can make it go away for good. When we help each other we should chisel it in stone, lest we never forget the love of a friend.
-Christian H. Godefroy

"No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted"
-Aesop

"Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on Earth."
-Muhammad Ali

"Not being able to do everything is no excuse for not doing everything you can."
-Ashleigh Brilliant

"It's easy to make a buck. It's a lot tougher to make a difference."
-Tom Brokaw

"Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little."
-Edmond Burke

"Our lives are to be used and thus to be lived as fully as possible, and truly it seems that we are never so alive as when we concern ourselves with other people."
-Harry Chapin

You make a living by what you get, but you make a life by what you give.
-Winston Churchill

"He who wishes to secure the good of others has already secured his own."
-Confucius

"Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can't help them, at least don't hurt them."
-The Dalai Lama

"Only a life lived for others is worth living."
-Albert Einstein

"It is one of the most beautiful compensations of this life that no man can sincerely try to help another without helping himself."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

"I am only one,
But still I am one.
I cannot do everything,
But still I can do something;
And because I cannot do everything
I will not refuse to do the something that I can do."
-Edward Everett

"If you ever need a helping hand, it is at the end of your arm. As you get older you must remember you have a second hand. The first one is to help yourself. The second hand is to help others."
-Audrey Hepburn

Go out and do something for somebody. Go out and give something to somebody. It will take you away from yourself and make you happy.
-Joseph Jefferson (1829-1905)

"Whenever you are to do a thing, though it can never be known but to yourself, ask yourself how you would act were all the world looking at you and act accordingly."
-Thomas Jefferson

It is from the numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a man stands up for an ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.
-Robert F. Kennedy

"Everyone can be great, because everyone can serve."
-Martin Luther King, Jr.

"A man never stands as tall as when he kneels to help a child."
-Knights of Pythogoras

"All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them."
-Matthew 7:12

"Do all the good you can
By all the means you can
In all the ways you can
In all the places you can
At all times you can
To all the people you can
As long as you can."
-Bernard Meltzer

"What we have done for ourselves alone dies with us. What we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal."
-Albert Pike

"Noble deeds and hot baths are the best cures for depression."
-Dodie Smith

"It is not how much you do, but how much love you put in the doing."
-Mother Teresa

Dreams


"Dreams come true. Without that possibility, nature
would not incite us to have them."
– John Updike

God Has Wonderful Plans For Your Life


How can hope for the future help me live today?

What we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will give us later. For all creation is waiting eagerly for that future day when God will reveal who his children really are. Against its will, everything on earth was subjected to God's curse. All creation anticipates the day when it will join God's children in glorious freedom from death and decay. For we know that all creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. And even we Christians, although we have the Holy Spirit within us as a foretaste of future glory, also groan to be released from pain and suffering. We, too, wait anxiously for that day when God will give us our full rights as his children, including the new bodies he has promised us. Now that we are saved, we eagerly look forward to this freedom. For if you already have something, you don't need to hope for it. But if we look forward to something we don't have yet, we must wait patiently and confidently.
Romans 8:18-25 NLT

Facing trials:

We have strength and courage to face the trials of this life because we can look beyond them to the glory that God has in store for us. We know the sacrifices we make now will be rewarded by God.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

What Next?


Online Dating Is Planned for Orangutans

Aug 15 4:13 PM US/Eastern

By MIKE CORDER
Associated Press Writer

THE HAGUE, Netherlands

Single male (red hair, long arms, interests include hanging in trees and grooming) seeks female for long-distance relationship and possibility of meeting up in future to help save species.

Zookeepers in the Netherlands are planning to hook up Dutch and Indonesian orangutans over the Internet and believe the link could at some stage be used as an online dating service where apes could get to know one another and keepers could work out whether they would be compatible mates.

First things first: A romantic dinner for two.

"We are going to set up an Internet connection between Indonesia and Apeldoorn so that the apes can see each other and, by means of pressing a button, be able to give one another food, for example," said Anouk Ballot, a spokeswoman for the Apenheul ape park in the central Dutch city of Apeldoorn.

She said the chance of two orangutans actually mating as a result of the online interaction was small due to the problem of transporting them between the Netherlands and Indonesia. "But I wouldn't rule it out completely," she told The Associated Press.

Ballot said the primary aim of the computer link between Apenheul and an orangutan center on the Indonesian part of Borneo was to raise public awareness of the apes and their plight. Activists say that the spread of palm oil plantations, coupled with logging, especially on Malaysian and Indonesian territories on Borneo island, is threatening animals such as wild orangutans with extinction by chewing up their native jungle habitat.

Ballot said that, in the past, captive orangutans separated by a wall have communicated with one another via a mirror placed in front of the two enclosures. Using Web cams and computer screens is an extension of that, she said.

She stressed that only orangutans who show a natural interest and aptitude will take part. The Apenheul park has 13 orangutans among its collection of apes.

There is still work to be done to set up the Internet connection. "We need to find ape-proof cables and screens," Ballot said, adding that the zoo hopes to have the orangutans online by the end of this year or early 2007.

So next time you run into someone in a chatroom and think "what a baboon," think twice: it just might be.

Beauty Tips


Here's a wonderful poem Audrey Hepburn wrote when asked to share her "beauty tips." It was read at her funeral years later:

For attractive lips, speak words of kindness.

For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people.

For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry.

For beautiful hair, let a child run his/her fingers through it once a day.

For poise, walk with the knowledge that you never walk alone.

Monday, August 14, 2006

We Are Awesome

No Nursing Home For Me


This sounds like a great idea!!

About 2 years ago I was on a cruise through the western
Mediterranean aboard a Princess liner. At dinner I noticed an elderly
lady sitting alone along the rail of the grand stairway in the main
dining room.

I also noticed that all the staff, ships officers, waiters, busboys,
etc., all seemed very familiar with this lady. I asked our waiter who
the lady was, expecting to be told that she owned the line,but he said he
only knew that she had been on board for the last four cruises, back-to-back.

As we left the dining room one evening I caught her eye and stopped to
say hello. We chatted and I said, "I understand you've been on this ship
for the last four cruises". She replied, "Yes, that's true." I stated, "I
don't understand".

She replied, without a pause, "It's cheaper than a nursing home".

So, there will be no nursing home in my future. When I get old and
feeble, I am going to get on a Princess Cruise Ship. The average cost for a
nursing home is $200 per day. I have checked on reservations on a Princess and
I can get a long term discount and senior discount price of $135 per day.

That leaves $65 a day for:

1. Gratuities which will only be $10 per day.

2. I will have as many as 10 meals a day if I can waddle to the
restaurant, or I can have room service (which means I can have
breakfast-in-bed every day of the week).

3. Princess has as many as three swimming pools, a workout room, free
washers and dryers, and shows every night.

4. They have free toothpaste and razors, and free soap and shampoo.

5. They will even treat you like a customer, not a patient. An extra
$5 worth of tips will have the entire staff scrambling to help you.

6. I will get to meet new people every 7 or 14 days.

7. T.V. broken? Light bulb need changing? Need to have the mattress
replaced? No Problem! They will fix everything and apologize for your
inconvenience.

8. Clean sheets and towels every day, and you don't even have to ask
for them.

9. If you fall in the nursing home and break a hip you are on Medicare;
if you fall and break a hip on the Princess ship they will upgrade you
to a suite for the rest of your life.

Now hold on for the best! Do you want to see South America, the Panama
Canal, Tahiti, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, or name where you want to
go?

Princess will have a ship ready to go. So don't look for me in a
nursing home, just call shore to ship.

P.S.: And don't forget, when you die, they just dump you over the side --
at no charge.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Cheap Perfume


After being away on business,a husband thought it would be nice to bring his wife a little gift.

"How about some perfume?" he asked the cosmetics clerk.

She showed him a bottle costing $50.00.

"That's a bit much," he said, so she returned with a smaller bottle for $30.00.

"That's still quite a bit," he complained.

Growing annoyed, the clerk brought out a tiny $15.00 bottle.

"What I mean," he said , "is I'd like to see something really cheap."

The clerk handed him a mirror.

Reaching Those In Need


-By Marc Estes
www.marcestes.com

The world is filled with people who have immense needs. It is my firm conviction that one of the greatest ways to preach the good news to a dead and dying world is through meeting their needs and touching them at their point of brokenness. In the gospels, Jesus models this approach by reaching out to people’s needs on forty-six different occasions before ever opening His mouth with a gospel message. He may have been on to something?

It says in 1 John 3:16-19, “We know what real love is because Christ gave us his life for us…Dear children, let us stop saying we love each; let us really show it by our actions.” John is trying to communicate a fundamental point that is missing in the lives of many Christians and many churches today; demonstration precludes proclamation!

It was Christ’s dying on the cross that validated His ministry and ultimately the gospel’s power and affect on humanity. The same applies to sharing the gospel. What validates our proclamation to a needy world is our willingness to meet them at their point of need, just as the guy in the ditch who was touched by the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37).

In addition to our actions, we must make the motive behind our actions, compassion. It is important that we reach out and show action to our words, but they too are in vain with out genuine love, care and concern for the person you are attempting to reach.

Let us make love our great aim, and SHOW a world the love of Christ as we proclaim the good news. The end result will be many people coming to Christ as a result of your sacrifice and love.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

History, Honesty and Hope


-History is a selective interpretation of events designed to justify those currently in power. Memory is the same thing on an individual scale.

-History is a set of lies agreed upon by the victors.

-History repeats itself, but each time the price goes up.

-Hoffer's law: When people are free to do what they want they usually imitate one another.

-Holding on to a hurt creates more hurt.

-Hollywood's a place where they'll pay you a thousand dollars for a kiss, and fifty cents for your soul. (Marilyn Monroe)

-Honest criticism is hard to take, particularly from a relative, a friend, an acquaintance, or a stranger. (Franklin P. Jones)

-Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.

-Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out. (Vaclav Havel)

-Hope is the ability to hear the music of the future.
Faith is having the courage to dance to it today.

-Hospital is a place where they wake you up to give you a sleeping pill.

-Hospitality is making your guests feel at home -- even when you wish they were.

-Hot heads and cold hearts never solved anything.

-Housework is something you do that nobody notices until you don't do it.

-How far you go in life is determined by how tender you are with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with those striving, and tolerant with the weak and strong, because some day in life you will have been all of them.

-How long a minute is depends on what side of the bathroom door you're on.

-How many of you believe in telekinesis? Raise MY hand!

-How would you like to spend eternity: Smoking or Non-Smoking?

-Hugs are not measured by quantity; they are measured by quality.

-Humans are interesting creatures, when given everything they need, they can't live through hardships.But when given very little they surpass every hardship.

-Humans are like tea bags. They never realize their strength until they are put in hot water.

-Human things must be known to be loved: but Divine things must be loved to be known.

-Humor to a man is like a feather pillow. It is filled with what is easy to get but gives great comfort.

-Hurt leads to bitterness, bitterness to anger, travel too far that road and the way is lost.(Terry Brooks)

-Hurt people hurt people. Whole people heal people.

-If you MUST speed on the highway, sing these hymns loudly:
at 45 mph.... "God Will Take Care of Me"
at 55 mph.... "Guide me, O Great Jehovah"
at 65 mph.... "Nearer My God to Thee"
at 75 mph.... "Nearer Still Nearer"
at 85 mph.... "This World is Not My Home"
at 95 mph.... "Lord, I'm Coming Home"
at 100 mph.... "Precious Memories"

He Who


-He who angers you controls you!

-He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever. (Chinese proverb)

-He who blames others has a long way to go on his journey.
He who blames himself is halfway there. He who blames no one has arrived.
(Chinese proverb)

-He who breaks a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom. (J.R.R. Tolkien)

-He who builds to every man's advice will have a crooked house. (Danish proverb)

-He who buys what he does not need steals from himself.

-He who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe is as good as dead; his eyes are closed. (Albert Einstein)

-He who cannot forgive breaks the bridge over which he himself must pass. (George Herbert)

-He who can take no interest in what is small, will take false interest in what is great.

-He who dies with the most toys, is, nonetheless, still dead.

-He who fails to prepare, prepares to fail.

-He who has a thing to sell and goes and whispers in a well is
not as apt to get the dollars as he who climbs a tree and hollers.

-He who has no Christmas in his heart will never find Christmas under a tree.

-He who hesitates is not only lost, but miles from the next exit.

-He who is not grateful for the good things he has would not be happy with
what he wishes he had.

-He who kneels before God can stand before anyone!

-He who kneels the most stands best. (D.L. Moody)

-He who knows not and knows not that he knows not is a fool. Shun him.
He who knows not and knows that he knows not is a child. Teach him.
He who knows and knows not that he knows is asleep. Wake him.
He who knows and knows that he knows is a wise man. Follow him. (Arab Proverb)

-He who knows others is learned.
He who knows himself is wise. (Lao Tse 604-531 BC)

-He who laughs last thinks slowest!

-He who receives a good turn should never forget it; he who does one should never remember it.

-He who sees the calamity of other people finds his own calamity light. (Arabian Proverb)

-He who slings mud loses ground.

-He who stands for nothing, falls for anything.

Because I Love Her


I made her...she is different. She is unique.

With love I formed her in her mother's womb.

I fashioned her with great joy.

I remember, with great pleasure, the day I created her.

(Psalms 139:13-16)

I love her smile. I love her ways.

I love to hear her laugh at the silly things she says and does.

She brings me great pleasure.

This is how I made her.

I made her pretty but not beautiful, because I knew her heart.

I knew she would be vain...I wanted her to search out her heart.

And to learn that it would be Me in her that would make her beautiful.

And it would be Me in her that would draw friends to her.

(1 Peter 3:35)

I made her in such a way that she would need Me.

I made her a little more lonesome than she would like to be.

It was only because I need for her to lean and depend on Me.

I know her heart...I know if I had not made her
like this she would go her own chosen way.

And forget me...her Creator.

I have given her many good and happy things.

BECAUSE I LOVE HER.

(Psalms 84:11)

Because I love her, I have seen her broken heart.

And the tears she cried, alone.

I have cried with her, and had a broken heart too.

Many times she has stumbled and fallen alone
only because she would not hold my hand.

So many lessons she's learned the hard way.

Because she would not listen to my voice.

(Isaiah 53:6)

So many times I have sat back and sadly
watched her go her merry way alone.

Only to watch her return to My arms, sad and broken.

(Isaiah 62:2)

And know she is mine again.

I made her and then I bought her.

Because I love her, I have to reshape and mold her.

It has not been easy for her or for me.

(Jeremiah 29:11)

I want her to be conformed to MY image.

This high goal I have set for her.

BECAUSE I LOVE HER.

-By Kathleen Redmond

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

My Story And How To Leave


****I'm going to tell you my story and then tell you how to leave. Feel free to email me if you need any help leaving and I will do my best to help. Make sure you read to the very bottom of this post.****

Escape from abuse

Published: October 6, 2005

By KATIE WILLSON
Of the News-Register

Growing up, Rachel wore thick glasses, favored long skirts and attended private Christian schools. Romance was a foreign concept.

She had never even held hands with a boy, let alone kissed one, when she met Gabriel Bustamante in the summer of 1992. By then, she was 19.

She wasn't much for developing strong friendships with other girls, either. She tended to keep to herself and read a lot, particularly religious tracts.

Rachel had moved out of her mother's home on the Oregon Coast and into her father's home on the Florida Coast. She had completed a vocational program for travel agents and landed a job with a local resort.

She was riding the bus to work one day when the lithe, brown-eyed Colombian struck up a conversation. And she was smitten.

"I'd never had any attention before," she said. "I had such low self-esteem. I was so flattered that somebody wanted to talk to me."

Gabriel was from Bogota. He was in the country illegally, but told Rachel differently.

"He told me he was looking for a good girl to marry. That first week, he talked about wanting to marry someone like me."

---

They rode the bus together for six months straight. And through his persistent attention, a relationship developed.

They never went out on dates. He never bought her lunch, or even a soda.

But during the rides they shared, he talked of marriage. Eventually, he talked her into it.

"I look back now and feel so stupid," she said. "We didn't date or anything. But he kept insisting he wanted to be with me. He told me I was beautiful."

Rachel had dreamed of a big wedding, with her beaming in a white satin gown as her family looked on. And she had dreamed of living a storybook life afterward with a kind, loving and supportive partner.

But the reality turned out quite differently. It turned out ugly, mean, cheap and sordid.

Rachel's is a cautionary tale for sheltered and naive young women everywhere.

Look out, her story screams. All may not be as it appears.

What Gabriel actually saw in her was not a blushing young bride with whom he could build a meaningful life. What he saw was an easy ticket to a green card, marker of legal status in the United States for a foreign national.

Overprotected in childhood can mean underprotected in adulthood. That made Rachel an easy mark for a skilled manipulator like Gabriel.

---

Now Rachel finds herself living the life of an unemployed single mother in rural Yamhill County. She keeps her address private for fear he will come after her or her three boys, who have suffered with her at Gabriel's hands.

At 32, Rachel is a whole lot wiser, but also a whole lot sadder. Life has dealt her a tough hand.

She and the boys, now 10, 5 and 3, are sharing a manufactured home with her father. Unemployed, she's getting by on food stamps.

Her dad's Social Security check is covering the mortgage payment. But that won't be the case much longer, as he is dying of advanced prostate cancer.

During 11 years of a numbingly abusive marriage, her husband repeatedly told her, "You'll never survive on your own. You can't think for yourself. You're a typical American woman."

She never bought it at the time. But now she can't help wondering sometimes if he might not have been right about that.

When she finally worked up the courage to file for divorce, take the family car and flee with the children, she dreamed of a new start. She dreamed of going to college, getting a good job, giving her boys a better life.

She even harbored thoughts of starting a resource center for abused women - women like her.

Things didn't go badly for Rachel at first. Her background in travel enabled her to get on with Evergreen International Aviation - a promising start.

But being a single parent meant taking time off sometimes - like the time her three little ones all came down with strep throat one after the other. Those times added up, and eventually, she said, Evergreen let her go.

She landed a part-time job after that. But it was a big step down, and it didn't last.

---

"You're ugly. You're fat. No one else will ever want you.

"You're stupid. You can't think for yourself. You'll never make it without me."

It was a steady drumbeat during her 11-year marriage to Gabriel Bustamante. And it left her beaten and battered.

She didn't think much of herself to start with. And he worked ceaselessly to drain even that small measure of self-esteem from her.

That's a pattern that repeats itself again and again and again in the cases they see in women's shelters, according to experts in domestic violence.

The abuser seeks a victim lacking inner confidence and a healthy support system. Then he works relentlessly to keep it that way.

In Rachel's case, the first sign of trouble actually came before their marriage - but just barely.

Gabriel called her the night of March 3, 1993. He was drunk.

They were scheduled to wed the next day, a Friday, at a courthouse in Miami Beach. Paranoid, particularly when he had been drinking hard, he wanted to make sure she was going to show up.

She did - without telling her family, which would not have approved. Trying to look the part of a bride, she wore a new cream-colored dress and dressed up her hair with a French braid.

---

After the ceremony, they shared a lobster dinner at a beachfront restaurant - one lobster dinner. Gabriel said he didn't have enough money for separate orders.

Back at their motel, Rachel changed into Victoria's Secret lingerie purchased just for the occasion. Never before had she donned anything so flimsy.

He grinned when she appeared from the bathroom, but it seemed more like a smirk than a smile. There were no tender kisses, no sweet endearments, no expressions of love.

Afterward, she felt frightened and alone. She feared she had made a big mistake - which, of course, she had.

He slept through most of the following day, a Saturday. She sat beside him watching TV. It wasn't the way she had imagined her honeymoon.

On Sunday, she moved into his studio apartment in Miami to set up housekeeping. She was just stepping out of the shower when a woman began banging on a window and shrieking at Gabriel.

"Tell her about the three abortions," she screamed. "Tell her you love me."

The woman said she couldn't go through with it.

Gabriel told her it was too late. He said he couldn't talk about it at the moment anyway.

"Tell her you married her for citizenship," the woman demanded.

Rachel pulled her clothes on and rushed into the front room. She arrived just as Gabriel was forcing the woman out and closing the door.

"Is it true?" she asked.

---

It was, Gabriel admitted. He figured it was the only way he was going to get his family up from Colombia.

But he told her she needn't worry. He could learn to love her.

He identified the woman who had come pounding on their door as Diana, a longtime flame.

Yes, he said, she had gotten pregnant three times. And each time, she had aborted the pregnancy at his expense.

"I want out," Rachel said, breaking into sobs.

"If you leave," Gabriel told her, "nobody will ever want you. You already gave up the most important thing. You waited for marriage and now it's gone."

He certainly knew what button to push, a typical trait of abusers.

"That's what I had saved myself for," Rachel said. "I had been taught that God honors you for saving yourself, and that's what I believed.

"If I stayed with him, he told me, he could protect me from others like him - men who would take advantage of a naive girl like me. So I said I would stay."

Bad decision.

A week later, Diana joined them on the bus for their morning commute to work.

Shocked and horrified, Rachel tried to flee. But Gabriel grabbed her by the wrist and held tight.

Rachel said the two of them were all grins as they engaged in animated and intimate conversation. All the while, Diana kept fingering her necklace, a gift from Gabriel.

---

With so many bad signs surfacing in such short order, why not just get out?

Advocates for abused women say victimization tends to share a key trait with alcoholism and drug addiction.

Victims can endure years of horrible abuse and still remain in denial. They don't tend to break free until they hit rock bottom, until they simply can't take it anymore.

"You think, 'Why does she stay?' " said Donna Curry, who works at McMinnville's Henderson House shelter. "I hear the same story over and over again. These are things I hear a lot."

Abusers are often suave, debonair and charming, she said. And they can spot a potential victim every time.

"They're very good at choosing their victims," Curry said. "Women who have no self-esteem, you can see it in a handshake, in body language.

"He's going to get her, marry her and move in as fast as he can, because it's easier for her to walk away if they're just dating."

Curry said any man who mentions marriage the first week of a relationship, as Gabriel did with Rachel, should cause a woman to worry. "What he's really saying is, he doesn't want you to know who he is," she said.

Deborah Cameron, executive director of the Domestic Violence Resource Center in Washington County, said it's time society stop blaming the victim for continuing to stay and start blaming the abuser for continuing to abuse.

"It's too bad the first question is, 'Why didn't she leave,' not, 'Why did he abuse her,'" Cameron said. Women with no self-esteem can easily mistake intensity for love. In reality, it's just an effort to control you."

Playing the "religion-card" is a common form of control.

"Women take marriage vows very seriously," she said. "They feel it's incumbent on them to fulfill those vows. A woman hopes things will change and he'll grow to love her."

Rachel tried to fulfill her vows, but nothing seemed to please Gabriel. It's all too familiar to battered women's advocates.

---

When their first anniversary came, Gabriel bought her roses. Delighted, she took a dozen pictures to keep.

But that would be the only anniversary he recognized in 11 years.

In May 1995, Rachel gave birth to a baby boy - Gabriel Bustamante Jr.

She went into labor so quickly, doctors hadn't time to give her an epidural. And she screamed with pain.

"You're overreacting," he told her. "It's not that bad."

Afterward, Gabriel walked out without a smile, an encouraging word or even a pat on the arm.

He was angry, she learned, because the baby had scratched his face with its tiny fingernails. "He seemed to be angry at the baby about something he couldn't help," she said.

A few months later, while Rachel was breast feeding, she fell asleep and Gabriel Jr. rolled off her chest onto the floor. Angry, Gabriel called her stupid.

"He told me the baby would probably hate me for life," she said. "He told me Gabriel Jr. would probably grow up to be a psycho and it would be all my fault."

Rachel sobbed at that recollection and many more like it.

Gabriel called her dumb, dirty, ugly, stupid and stubborn. Unimportant, unlovable, uncooperative and unattractive. Fat, crazy, irrational and boring. Needy, frivolous, irresponsible and lazy.

He said she was a bad wife, a bad mother, a bad cook. A bitch, a loser, a screw-up and a schemer. Una cochina, una areputa. A child who needed discipline, a typical stupid American woman, nothing but white trash.

It took little to set him off. If she so much as heated the baby's bottle on medium instead of high - he favored high because it was quicker - he called her rebellious.

He said she couldn't care for herself, care for her children, think for herself or survive on her own. She had no class, no taste, no personality, no common sense.

No man could ever love or desire her, he said. Even God had abandoned her.

---

Gabriel bought bright red lipstick and made her wear it every day.

That was the only thing he bought her. He did it, he said, because she didn't look quite as ugly in lipstick.

When he didn't buy for her, she went without - even groceries.

He filled their closets with classic Italian suits and other finery. Only the best was good enough for him.

She made do with a handful of T-shirts, a couple of pairs of jeans and three dresses, all selected by him without any input from her.

All three dresses were red and black. Her favorite color was pink, but she couldn't wear anything in pink.

He didn't like pink. He liked red and black.

Paranoid and controlling, he kept a close watch on her every move. He called her eight to 10 times a day to make sure she was where she said she would be.

She didn't know how to drive and he wouldn't let her learn. And he maintained total control of the money - hers as well as his.

Iron control is one of the hallmarks of the abuser, experts all say. And Rachel experienced years of it at her husband's hands.

---

In the spring of 1996, Gabriel quit his job as a jeweler. He had decided to go into the business for himself.

They packed up and flew to Germany, because he had heard he could get cheap stones there. It was below freezing when they parked in front of a factory in Idar-Oberstein.

He took the keys and told her to wait in their rented car with Gabriel Jr. Three hours later, he still hadn't returned.

Rachel and the baby were freezing, so she walked up to the factory's employee entrance. "Once inside, I found my way to a waiting room," she said.

An employee said her husband was touring the factory. It took another hour, but at least they were warm.

When Gabriel entered the waiting room and found them, he seemed shocked. She was heartbroken to see the look of anger on his face.

"I couldn't let them know I had my family here," he snapped. "It doesn't look professional."

Back in the United States, Rachel got pregnant again. But this time, she miscarried.

"I told my husband I couldn't wait to see our baby in heaven," she recalled.

"He laughed at me and made fun of me," she said. "He told me never to mention it again. I suffered alone."

---

The following winter, Rachel had finally had enough. She took Gabriel Jr. and flew to Michigan, where she landed a job with Northwest Airlines.

Soon after, Gabriel loaded a U-Haul and followed. But he said he would never forgive her for forcing him to move.

They spent the next five years in Michigan, and life there continued pretty much unchanged.

He ruled out birth control. Too expensive, he said. So Rachel twice more found herself pregnant, giving birth to two more boys.

Through her work, Rachel got free air travel. But when there wasn't enough room in coach for both of them, he moved into first class and left her behind.

They started attending a Jewish synagogue, Shema Yisrael, in Southfield. But Gabriel instructed her not to talk with any fellow parishioners or make any friends.

In fact, Rachel had no friends. Gabriel had told her female friendship contacts would expose him to temptation.

He said men were "animals who can't be trusted."

---

In 2003, Gabriel became obsessed with a co-worker named Susan.

He had often spoken in vulgar sexual terms about famous women. Now he began focusing his sexual fantasies on Susan, telling Rachel all the things he imagined doing with his co-worker.

He said he loved the perfume Susan wore - Spazio Krizia.

He bought a bottle and asked Rachel to wear it. When she complied, he took to murmuring "oh Susan," imagining he was with his fantasy love rather than his wife.

Later that year, during a special event at the synagogue, Rachel dressed up in her best dress, arranged her hair just so and drew on bright red lips. "I was so sure he would notice," she said.

He did. He smiled and bent down to whisper something in Gabriel Jr.'s ear.

When they climbed into the car to go to the synagogue, Gabriel Jr. piped up, "Mommy, daddy told me to tell you that you are getting fat."

"I felt my whole world crash around me," she said. "Now he was teaching my beautiful children to put me down too."

Rachel loved Pepsi, but Gabriel refused to let her drink it - or even bring it into the house.

"Pepsi makes her fat," more than one relative recalls him saying. "She doesn't like Pepsi."

---

Rachel's mother remembers visiting a few times over the years. The kitchen was devoid of even the basics - flour, sugar, seasonings, crackers.

When she and her daughter went out to shop or have lunch, her mother paid. She bought food for the family and toys for the boys.

But she said of Gabriel, "He throws away toys that are special to the boys, as a form of punishment." By her next visit, any toys she bought would be gone.

Rachel's sister, Rhoda Maciel, had the same experience.

"I stopped spending money on toys and gifts for my nephews," she said, "because I have discovered he throws them away - or sells them if they have any value. On one visit, the toy I bought for Gabriel was thrown away on the second day after my arrival."

Instead of action figures, Gabriel Jr. grew up playing with shampoo bottles. He pretended they were warriors or animals.

Even today, he keeps a collection of VO5 bottles. He has them lined up on his bedroom dresser according to color.

During the boys' early years, Gabriel insisted that Rachel spoon-feed them, make their beds and dress them.

At age 4, Gabriel Jr. didn't even know how to zip a zipper. At age 9, he still couldn't tie his own shoes.

Gabriel refused to change the babies' diapers. That irritated members of her family.

Maciel recalled a time she went to the zoo with Gabriel and Gabriel Jr. while Rachel was at work.

"He proceeded to tell me that I had forgotten to change Gabriel Jr.'s diapers," she said. "Honestly, I didn't even think about it, as I have no children of my own."

She told him he should do it. After all, it was his son.

Instead, she said, the diaper went unchanged until Rachel got home from work.

---

Gabriel used to whip the boys on the back, arms and legs, with a belt as they cowered in a corner, crying.

Rachel's sister, mother and father all witnessed such incidents. Each time, Rachel promised them it wouldn't happen again.

Gabriel, who declined an interview for this story, denied that in custody proceedings associated with their divorce. But the two oldest boys said they remember such whippings all too well.

They don't remember doing anything wrong. But they remember their dad beating them with a black belt. They also remember him locking them in a dark bathroom and vowing to never let them out.

When their 10th anniversary came and went in March 2003, Rachel asked Gabriel why he stayed with her if he didn't love her.

"I've put 10 years of my life into changing you," he said. "I don't want to have to start over trying to change someone else."

Rachel tried to talk to the rabbi about problems in her marriage and home life. He said he wasn't going to get involved unless Gabriel asked him to, and she never brought it up again.

The following November, Northwest Airlines announced it was closing her office. She would have to relocate to Seattle.

She was hoping Gabriel wouldn't follow her this time, but he did. He quit his job and accompanied her west.

Rachel had to get a driver's license, because she couldn't get to and from her job in Seattle on public transit. "He drove me to the test, all the time telling me I wouldn't pass," she said.

She walked into the office, paid the fee and then broke down sobbing. The attendant told her to come back when she had collected herself.

On the way home, Gabriel told her she'd never be able to pass the test anyway. She was too stupid.

But eventually, she did.

---

The following spring, Rachel got a phone call. Her aunt, Helen O'Neal, had been gunned down on March 20 in Sachse, Texas. Newspapers reported a burglar had fired the fatal shots.

"I'll bet you anything the husband did it," Gabriel told her. "You women drive men crazy."

He warned her, "Don't drive me crazy."

Rachel went to the funeral to comfort her father and her uncle William.

William didn't seem sad. He seemed bitter.

Their home had been burgled the previous year, and police had never caught the culprit. "They didn't catch him then and they won't catch him now," her uncle said.

Before flying back home, Rachel visited the O'Neal residence. As she walked through, she noticed March 20 had been starred on a wall calendar.

The notation didn't escape police attention either. They soon had a tape of William telling his mistress about shooting Helen, stealing her expensive jewelry and hiding the gun.

Two weeks later, they arrested William on a charge of first-degree murder. They said he had slipped away during a bike race, shot his wife, then returned to finish.

---

At William's trial that fall, a jury deliberated less than two hours before finding him guilty. By then, fearing she would end up like Helen, Rachel had taken the children and fled to Oregon.

She eventually filed for divorce. It just became final three weeks ago.

Gabriel has since returned to Miami, but that's not far enough for her. Fearing his wrath, she has taken out a restraining order barring him from contact.

He is supposed to be making child support payments, she said. But he hasn't made any so far.

If he wants to ever see the kids again, she said, he has to take anger management, domestic violence and parenting classes. But he hasn't done any of that so far.

Gabriel did not return calls from the News-Register offering him a chance to tell his side of the story.

But in the Seattle court where the divorce and custody proceedings unfolded, he told the judge he took good care of his wife and sons. He said they never went without food or shelter, and related twice giving up good jobs to follow them.

"The Bible says that a husband is the one who has authority and occupies a position of headship in his own household," he told the judge. "What I'm asking for is respect, submission."

When women try to take control, a household becomes vulnerable to evil, he said.

---

Today, Rachel lives in a quiet cul-de-sac on a quiet hill in rural Yamhill County.

She's thrown out the red and black dresses in favor of some outfits from New To You. They feature lots of pink.

Her oldest son has learned to tie his own shoes, but still prefers shampoo bottles to toys. He rocks them back and forth in his hands, imagining they're characters out of The Chocolate Factory, the Titanic or Star Wars.

Remembering the terror he felt upon being locked in a darkened bathroom, 5-year-old Michael is afraid to go into a bathroom by himself, even with the light on. Terrified of the dark, he has recurring nightmares about a devil, a killer or his daddy visiting him at night in his bedroom.

Three-year-old Daniel doesn't remember much about his dad, and maybe that's a good thing. He harbors no phobias about toys, bathrooms or darkness.

Meanwhile, Rachel continues to search the help-wanteds, looking for work.

More than anything, she wants to prove her husband wrong. She wants to prove - to her sons and to herself - that she's capable of making it on her own.

*************************************************************************************

I have a good job now. Even though it wasn't easy, it was worth it. Now it is your turn:

* Definitely take your children with you. It may be more difficult later.
* Get legal custody of them within a few days. This is very important. Many of the groups listed in this book may help you find assistance.
* If you do not have your children with you, it may be difficult filing for temporary custody of your children. The parent who has physical possession of the children may have an advantage getting temporary custody.
* Your partner may try to kidnap, threaten or harm the children in order to get you to return.
* If you are in immediate danger and cannot take your children, contact the police immediately to arrange for temporary protective custody. (This does not mean you will lose custody. Permanent custody will be decided later by a judge.)

Where do I go?

* Stay with a friend or relatives.
* If you are a woman, do not stay with a man unless he is a relative. (Living with a man you are not married to could hurt your chances of getting custody of your children and spousal support. It could also cause conflict with your abuser.)
* Go to a battered women’s shelter with your children. The staff there can help you get legal and financial help as well as provide counseling and emotional support for you and your children.
* Or call 911 because it is a good start.

Your safety is the most important thing. Listed below are tips to help keep you safe. It is important to get help with your safety plan.

If you are in an abusive relationship, think about...

1. Having important phone numbers nearby for you and your children. Numbers to have are the police, hotlines, friends and the local shelter.

2. Friends or neighbors you could tell about the abuse. Ask them to call the police if they hear angry or violent noises. If you have children, teach them how to dial 911. Make up a code word that you can use when you need help.

3. How to get out of your home safely. Practice ways to get out.

4. Safer places in your home where there are exits and no weapons. If you feel abuse is going to happen try to get your abuser to one of these safer places.

5. Any weapons in the house. Think about ways that you could get them out of the house.

6. Even if you do not plan to leave, think of where you could go. Think of how you might leave. Try doing things that get you out of the house - taking out the trash, walking the pet or going to the store. Put together a bag of things you use everyday (see the checklist below). Hide it where it is easy for you to get.

7. Going over your safety plan often.

If you consider leaving your abuser, think about...

1. Four places you could go if you leave your home.

2. People who might help you if you left. Think about people who will keep a bag for you. Think about people who might lend you money. Make plans for your pets.

3. Keeping change for phone calls or getting a cell phone.

4. Opening a bank account or getting a credit card in your name.

5. How you might leave. Try doing things that get you out of the house - taking out the trash, walking the family pet, or going to the store. Practice how you would leave.

6. How you could take your children with you safely. There are times when taking your children with you may put all of your lives in danger. You need to protect yourself to be able to protect your children.

7. Putting together a bag of things you use everyday. Hide it where it is easy for you to get.

ITEMS TO TAKE, IF POSSIBLE
 Children (if it is safe)
 Money
 Keys to car, house, work
 Extra clothes
 Medicine
 Important papers for you and your children
 Birth certificates
 Social security cards
 School and medical records
 Bankbooks, credit cards
 Driver's license
 Car registration
 Welfare identification
 Passports, green cards, work permits
 Lease/rental agreement
 Mortgage payment book, unpaid bills
 Insurance papers
 PPO, divorce papers, custody orders
 Address book
 Pictures, jewelry, things that mean a lot to you
 Items for your children (toys, blankets, etc.)

8. Think about reviewing your safety plan often.

If you have left your abuser, think about...

1. Your safety - you still need to.

2. Getting a cell phone. HAVEN may be able to provide you with a cell phone that is programmed to only call 911. These phones are for when you need to call the police and cannot get to any other phone.

3. Getting a PPO from the court. Keep a copy with you all the time. Give a copy to the police, people who take care of your children, their schools and your boss.

4. Changing the locks. Consider putting in stronger doors, smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, a security system and outside lights.

5. Telling friends and neighbors that your abuser no longer lives with you. Ask them to call the police if they see your abuser near your home or children.

6. Telling people who take care of your children the names of people who are allowed to pick them up. If you have a PPO protecting your children, give their teachers and babysitters a copy of it.

7. Telling someone at work about what has happened. Ask that person to screen your calls. If you have a PPO that includes where you work, consider giving your boss a copy of it and a picture of the abuser. Think about and practice a safety plan for your workplace. This should include going to and from work.

8. Not using the same stores or businesses that you did when you were with your abuser.

9. Someone that you can call if you feel down. Call that person if you are thinking about going to a support group or workshop.

10. Safe way to speak with your abuser if you must.

11. Going over your safety plan often.

WARNING: Abusers try to control their victim's lives. When abusers feel a loss of control - like when victims try to leave them - the abuse often gets worse. Take special care when you leave. Keep being careful even after you have left.

Your life and your safety are most important. Trying to bring your children with you is important. Everything else is secondary.

****I will get you help if you need it. Just leave!****

The Dog


This was written by a good friend.

"I was not a good boy in my past and I have wanted to help the young ladies I hurt with my selfishness. I would like to take the time to apologize to you for all the males because we do not have to be this way because of our insecurities. We do not need to control you because that does not love you.

Let me tell you about a type of male I call the Dog! He is really good. He knows just how to sniff you out. In a short time he can sniff out all your desires and in a short time can make the relationship warm and loving (or so you will think it is).

Most of the time he is trying to get you to bed, when he gets the sex then things begin to change, you have been conquered. Usually he runs on to find someone else to play this ritual on, sometimes he will keep you in his cage (marriage) or his little black book (touch up sex) but most of the time he is gong to go play with others.

The only way to defeat this rascal is to have a plan in the beginning of your relationships.

1. Plan to date longer than one year. He is working on a much shorter time table. If he can't really date you and spend time with you then ask the real questions of why? Do not run from the truth of your answers because of the lure for togetherness.

2. Plan to not have sex all the time you are dating. He is living on basic instincts and is not really being a human being.

3. Have safe male friends that you can bring this person around to check out. These are usually family but do not forget the family of God.

Most times the Dog does not plan that far out and will not hang around to capture the Real Jewel Your Heart and Your Love."

Monday, August 07, 2006

Spouse Abuse Bible Study

I. ABUSE IS WRONG.
-husbands not to be harsh Colossians 3:19
-husbands to nourish and cherish wives as they would
their own bodies Ephisians 5:25-29
-peace in relationships Romans 12:18
-folly of venting anger Proverbs 14:17
Proverbs 14:29
Proverbs 29:11

II. ALLOWING SOMEONE TO ABUSE YOU IS WRONG.
-safety precautions advised Proverbs 33:3
-body as temple of Holy Spirit 1 Corinthians 6:15-20
note: This scripture is often used to preach
against promiscuity, smoking, and abuse of alcohol
and other drugs. It most certainly applies to
domestic violence.
-look to interests of SELF as well as that of others
Philippians 2:3,4
-love neighbor as SELF Matthew 22:39

III. FAILURE TO HELP AN ABUSED PERSON IS WRONG
-social responsibility Proverbs 24:11,12
Proverbs 10:10
Proverbs 31:8

IV. THE ISSUE OF SUBMISSION This is another complicated
issue for the abused Christian women. The "obey" part of the
marriage vow is often misunderstood to mean that the women
shoud be supressed, when the intent is actually cooperation.
This section will examine the issue of submission and the
Bilbical view of mariage.
-marital roles Genesis 2:18
Ephesians 5:22-33
Colossians 3:18
1 Peter 3:1-6
Titus 2:3-5
-both men and women created in God's image Genesis 1:27
-ideal wife is valuable, strong, organized, dignigied,
secure, confident, hardworking, wise, worthy of parise,
a money earner, a decision maker, a teacher, a leader,
of service to her househod, of service to her con-
munity, not neglectful of own needs, trusting in God
Proverbs 31:10-31
-husband leradership role implies servanthood
Matthew 20:25-28
note: Throughout the Bible, when leaders are
appointed, it is in order to meet the needs of the
state, community, or organization. The focus is on
being a servant to fulfill those needs, not power and
status.
-when God's will and husbands will conflict, obey God
Acts 4 and 5 (specifically 5:29)
note: When a husband is abusing a wife, he is
making demands contrary to the will of God. The
wife should therefore, not submit.

The Dash

by Linda Ellis

I read of a man who stood to speak
At the funeral of a friend

He referred to the dates on her tombstone
From the beginning to the end

He noted that first came her date of her birth
And spoke the following date with tears,

But he said what mattered most of all
Was the dash between those years

For that dash represents all the time
That she spent alive on earth.

And now only those who loved her
Know what that little line is worth.

For it matters not how much we own;
The cars, the house, the cash,

What matters is how we live and love
And how we spend our dash.

So think about this long and hard.
Are there things you'd like to change?

For you never know how much time is left,
That can still be rearranged.

If we could just slow down enough
To consider what's true and real

And always try to understand
The way other people feel.

And be less quick to anger,
And show appreciation more

And love the people in our lives
Like we've never loved before.

If we treat each other with respect,
And more often wear a smile

Remembering that this special dash
Might only last a little while.

So, when your eulogy is being read
With your life's actions to rehash

Would you be proud of the things they say
About how you spent your dash?

© 1996 All Rights Reserved, Linda Ellis

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Promised Land


"The lure of the distant and the difficult is deceptive. The great
opportunity is where you are."
-John Burroughs, American naturalist and writer

Most of the time, the green grass on the other side of the fence is
nothing more than an optical illusion brought on by our own
reluctance to get up off the couch and turn the sprinkler on.
-Kate Nowak

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Advantages To Being Single


There can be many advantages to being single if you just stop and think about it. When focusing on the negative aspects of being single, it’s easy to say that there are no advantages. So let’s look at some of the positive aspects of being single.

• More freedom and independence

Being single means you have more freedom. You answer to no one. If you’re single, you don’t have to let anyone know when you decide to go somewhere. It allows for more spontaneity in your life. If you want to take a weekend road trip, you can make that decision on the spur of the moment. Being single allows you to be your own person and really just do as you please. If you want to sit on the couch in an old T-shirt and shorts while munching on Doritos, no one will give you any flack for doing so. Being single allows you to make your own choices. (Guys, you wouldn’t have to worry about missing Monday Night Football to watch the Lifetime Movie of the Week.) Especially for men, being single forces you to do things for yourself, like cooking and cleaning. Being skilled at different things makes you a more complete, independent, well-rounded person, which is a great quality to have, and one that will be noticed if you decide to seek a relationship later on.

• More control over your time

We live in a busy society. You probably hear people complaining that they never have enough time, all while scribbling their plans for the next three months into their Palm Pilot. These people probably aren’t single. When you’re single, you may have more time for yourself and things that you like to do. You can set your own schedule. Being single may give you more time for hobbies, relaxation, being with friends and family, and so on. Being single gives you more time to better yourself. You can use the extra time to work on your career, or maybe take classes, either for job advancement or just for personal enrichment. Relationships and marriage especially require lots and lots of time, as anyone who is married or in a relationship will tell you. So, doesn’t it stand to reason to take advantage of any extra time while you have it?

• More control over your money

In addition to time, relationships also require money, and a lot of it. Being single gives you full financial freedom. You will be in control of where every dollar you spend goes. Guys, think of the money you’ll save by not having to pay for overpriced dinners and movies, and buying presents all the time. Being single allows you to spend money that you have on yourself with no guilt. Men, that means you can get that 36-inch high definition flat screen TV that you saw at Best Buy without getting an earful later. Ladies, you can treat yourself to that piece of jewelry or new outfit without having to use the Jaws of Life to get the Visa card out of a husband’s wallet. Being single also makes it easier to plan for saving money for the future and for unforeseen circumstances.

• Not having to tolerate another’s annoying habits

Let’s face it – all of us have quirks about ourselves that someone else finds annoying. Being single frees you from this issue, at least while you’re at home. A single person doesn’t have to listen to someone snore all night while hogging the blankets. Guys, you wouldn’t have to worry about finding a fuzzy toilet seat cover or pink shower curtain in your bathroom. Ladies, you wouldn’t have to constantly nag someone to take care of the dishes piling up in the sink or take out the trash. Being single allows you to give your patience a rest and live in a non-frustrating environment. The only disgusting habits you’ll have to put up with are your own.

• No emotional roller coaster rides

Being single allows you to stabilize your emotions. When a person is in a relationship, especially when it is just starting, your emotions can go completely out of whack. Your mind can go a mile a minute constantly thinking things like, “Does s/he still like me?”, “Did I say the right thing?”, “What should I do now?”, “When should I call next?” The list goes on and on. It’s enough to make a person go bonkers with all these emotions running rampant. In addition, being single means that you won’t have to worry about going through a heart-wrenching breakup. Once you’ve become a successful single, you will appreciate being able to be emotionally relaxed.

• Ability to become aware of who you are

Being single can give you a deeper awareness of who you really are - not someone as defined by a relationship. During the initial stages of a relationship, you try to make yourself look as good as possible to impress the other person, and often find yourself saying or doing things you normally wouldn’t do. Being single allows you to be yourself. Being single and having more time alone allows you to increase your self-awareness, define yourself as an individual, and become more in touch with your emotions and thinking.

These are just some of the advantages to being single. As you progress into becoming a successful single, you will find more and more advantages. Think of the things you wouldn’t be able to do in a relationship that you can do as a single. Think of the things you would have to do in a relationship that you wouldn’t have to do as a single. Once you move past the “grass is greener on the other side” way of thinking, you will then be ready to make the most of being single.

You may be wondering what exactly makes a successful single. There are four main characteristics:

* A successful single is one that wants to change.
o They want to discover ways of being happy as a single person.
o Only you can make the decision to want to change.

* A successful single is content and confident with who they are.
o They don’t need another person for a crutch.

* A successful single maximizes the advantages of being single while minimizing the disadvantages.
o Discover what advantages you have in being single, then use them to their full potential.
o Handle any disadvantages in a constructive manner.

* A successful single sees singleness as an opportunity, not a trap.
o Singleness is an opportunity to enrich yourself and learn more about yourself.

If you want to be a successful single, you have to feel complete on your own.