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  • The power of prayer and humor

    Thanks to everyone who offered prayers and well wishes for me today (well, yesterday now) while I had my appendix out. The surgeon reported it went pretty much like he figured it would and there were no surprises. The recovery nurse kept saying how well I was doing and got us booted from there in time to miss the evening traffic. I have had less pain from this than I have had during many of the previous times it was giving me trouble when I did not know what it was. The anesthesiologist was so skillful, that I have had virtually no nausea, only a bit of a tender throat where the breathing tube was, which these lovely pain pills I just took and my green tea throat lozenges should manage quite nicely…

    Laughter is good medicine, too. Donkey is planning to post a photo he took of me in the recovery area that should give every one quite a chuckle! Here is another cute story from a pediatric nurse, too:

    A nurse on the pediatric ward, before listening to the little ones chests, would plug the stethoscope into their ears and let them listen to their own hearts. Their eyes would always light up with awe, but she never got a response equal to four-year old Adam’s comment.

    Gently she tucked the stethoscope into his ears and placed the disk over his heart. “Listen”, she said………..”What do you suppose that is?” He drew his eyebrows together in a puzzled line and looked up as if lost in the mystery of the strange tap – tap – tapping deep in his chest.

    Then his face broke out in a wondrous grin and he asked, “Is that Jesus knocking?”

  • Good News/Bad News

    EDIT: My wonderful mechanic was actually able to restore the data to do the car inspection so I do not have to bring the car back later. They also solved the mystery of the panel light that was telling me there is a bulb out somewhere AND got a price adjustment on my battery that had to be replaced since they said it was still under warranty, bringing the total bill down to around $350.

    The actual day and time of the surgery will be Thursday, November 6th at 1pm if anyone was curious about that…

    Bad News: I need an appendectomy.

    Good news: It’s the chronic kind, not the acute kind that usually makes emergency surgery part of the treatment plan, so it can be scheduled when and where it will work better for me.

    Bad News: My car left me stranded in the middle of nowhere yesterday afternoon in the middle of a very hectic day and I missed out a very fun party last evening.

    Good News: The weather was just gorgeous and I was at a park (for a quick break between appointments) watching children playing while I had to wait for help with my car. If I hadn’t been all dressed up, I might have even gotten a chance to try out the scooter they we having so much fun with. I now have a cell phone that works properly so help was only a quick call away. I also have a very nice Donkey that didn’t mind too much having to drive across town, try to jump start my car & get all dirty instead of coming home to a nice dinner and his xanga buddies. The ladies that I was supposed to transport to the south studio Halloween party were also very gracious and understanding about it.

    Bad News: The inspection on my car is due by the end of this month, but the mechanic told me that since the battery had to be disconnected to repair the car, the settings have been cleared and it will fail the inspection if he does runs it today.

    Good News: My wonderful mechanic is going to go ahead and run the test, write up the failure report so I have documentation if I get stopped for an expired inspection while I put the 60 or so miles on the car that will bring all the stored information back up. I will have 15 days to get back there and he will redo the test at no charge. I can also get the door on my gas cap fixed so I don’t have to pry it open with my key any more, an oil change while the car is in the garage anyway so I can get through the crazy-busy retail/holiday season and all of that, along with the charge to tow my car back to civilization will still be less than $500. He also promised that he could have my car back to me today, repaired and ready to roll. How cool is that?

    Other good stuff:

    Time to xanga today since I do not have any way of doing errands. Xanga also seems to be going much less slowly that it was for a while there, too!

    The CT scans, bloodwork, pre-op counseling and all that other stuff to do for my surgery has given me opportunities to invite even more ladies to try Mary Kay.

    There is a Halloween party tonight at another Mary Kay studio much closer to my home and two other ladies are planning on attending that one with me.

    All in all, more good news than bad!

    pumpkinpic

    If you need a smile, here are some for you…

  • Halloween humor

    I had intended to leave my political post up until November, but I could not pass up the chance to share this gem I just got from my sister. The subject line: Never eat pumpkin pie again…

    pumpkin pie

    It did kinda put me off pumpkin pie after I saw it. I cannot even imagine why someone would want to do this.

    Any ideas?

  • Political forecast

    Ten predictions no matter who wins the election:

    1. The Bible will still have all the answers.

    2. Prayer will still work.

    3. The Holy Spirit will still move.

    4. God will still inhabit the praises of His people.

    5. There will still be God-anointed preaching.

    6. There will still be singing of praise to God.

    7. God will still pour out blessings upon His people.

    8. There will still be room at the Cross.

    9. Jesus will still love you.

    10. Jesus will still save the lost.

    Isn’t it great to know who is still in control??? AMEN!!!

    I just love my email buddies that send me all this cool stuff…

  • Got Prayer? Methinks we are going to need a lot of it…

    Edit: If you are so inclined, I would appreciate prayers (and I know she would, too!) for my bestest Mary Kay buddy, Patrisha, who just told me that she has breast cancer. Thanks!
     
    God Knows Us


    Suggested Bible Reading

    O LORD, you have searched me and known me. You know when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from far away. You search out my path and my lying down, and are acquainted with all my ways. Even before a word is on my tongue, O LORD, you know it completely. You hem me in, behind and before, and lay your hand upon me. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is so high that I cannot attain it.

    Where can I go from your spirit? Or where can I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there; if I make my bed in Sheol, you are there. If I take the wings of the morning and settle at the farthest limits of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me fast. If I say, “Surely the darkness shall cover me, and the light around me become night,” even the darkness is not dark to you; the night is as bright as the day, for darkness is as light to you.

    For it was you who formed my inward parts; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works;that I know very well.

    -Psalm 139:1-14 (NRSV)


    Today’s Scripture

    Your Father knows what you need before you ask.

    -Matthew 6:8 (NRSV)



    VERY often we find we have so many things to pray for that we don’t know how or where to begin. Our prayers can be jumbled and muddled as we pour out our needs to God. We feel confused and mixed up as we try in earnest to convey all we think God needs to know.

    But we need not fear. God who knows each one of us intimately knows our needs before we even speak. God also knows our fears, our sins, and our feelings of inadequacy and insecurity. God knows every detail of your life and mine.

    As Jesus talked to the woman at the well, she told him some personal facts. But Jesus already knew them! When Jesus walked along the road in Jericho, he already knew Zacchaeus was in the tree; in fact, he knew all about Zacchaeus too.

    God knows about us as well. Even before we were born, God knew us. From the moment of our conception God has watched us. When we are in turmoil over how and what to pray, we can offer God simple words and our heart’s yearnings. Our powerful and amazing God already knows the facts.

    Gil Sayer (West Sussex, England)

    Prayer
    Thank you, Lord, that we don’t need to offer complicated prayers. Whatever words we can say are enough for you because you know us so intimately. Amen.

    Thought for the Day

    God knows the most intimate parts of my life – and loves me.

    Prayer Focus


    To believe that our prayers are good enough

    Related Reading
    The scripture quotation is from the NEW REVISED STANDARD VERSION of the Bible, copyright © 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    PLEASE SHARE THIS MINISTRY with a friend. Invite them to sign up for the free E-Mail Devotional by visiting: http://www.upperroom.org/devotional/email/

     

  • This might sting a bit…

    Sent to me in an email entitled Why I didn’t make the 2008 Olympics….

     

  • A voice of reason among the din of blame & shame

    Still stealing other people’s stuff here, but this one is a bit more serious. I probably shouldn’t trust any mere mortal’s opinion as much as do this guy, but I do. Can “the answer” really be as simple as he says here? Perhaps. The knot in my stomach as I have been reading and hearing about the potential collapse of our economic system has loosened a bit after reading this article Jim Wallis wrote in Sojourners magazine:

    Greed in the Economy: It’s the Morality, Sinner


    Everyone has heard the famous phrase, attributed to James Carville, which supposedly won the 1992 presidential election for Bill Clinton: “It’s the economy, stupid!” It’s still good advice, especially as the shocking collapse of the financial markets has turned the election campaign into a much more serious and somber discussion than lipstick on pigs.

    But the issue is deeper than just the economy. I would now rephrase Carville and say, “It’s the morality, sinner!” And I would direct it to the people who have been making the decisions about the direction of this economy from Wall Street to Washington. Here is the morality play:

    Aggressive lending to potential home-buyers using subprime and adjustable rate mortgages led to “mortgage-backed securities” being sold to investors at high returns. As housing prices dropped and interest rates rose, homeowners got caught, fell behind on payments, and millions of foreclosures followed. That resulted in the mortgage-backed assets losing value with banks unable to sell the securities. So the subprime lenders began to fail. Asset declines then spread to investment banks. We have now seen the sale of Bear Stearns brokered by the government, and last week the government took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as mortgage defaults threatened them. Then Lehman Brothers fell into bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch was sold. Now another bailout, this time of AIG, the largest insurance company in the country — whose potential demise threatened the whole financial system even further.

    During the height of the lending frenzy, many people got very rich, as they did during the previous technology bubble. Now with the collapse, experts say the most likely result will be further tightening of credit and lending standards for consumers and businesses. Home, retail, and business loans will become more expensive and harder to secure. And the consequences of that will spread to most of America.

    In the accounts and interpretation of these events, a word is slowly entering the discussion and analysis — greed. It’s an old concept, and one with deep moral roots. Even venerable establishment economists such as Robert Samuelson now say, “Greed and fear, which routinely govern financial markets, have seeded this global crisis … short-term rewards blinded them to the long-term dangers.”

    The people on top of the American economy get rich whether they make good or bad decisions, while workers and consumers are the ones who suffer from all their bad ones. Prudent investment has been replaced with reckless financial gambling in what some have called a “casino economy.” And the benefits accruing to top CEOs and financial managers, especially as compared to the declining wages of average workers, has become one of the greatest moral travesties of our time.

    In the search for blame, some say greed and some say deregulation. Both are right. The financial collapse of Wall Street is the fiscal consequence of the economic philosophy that now governs America — that markets are always good and government is always bad. But it is also the moral consequence of greed, where private profit prevails over the concept of the common good. The American economy is often rooted in unbridled materialism, a culture that continues to extol greed, a false standard of values that puts short-term profits over societal health, and a distorted calculus that measures human worth by personal income instead of character, integrity, and generosity.

    Americans have a love-hate relationship with government and business. The climate seems to shift between an “anything goes” mentality and stricter government regulation. The excesses of the 1920s, leading to the Great Depression, were followed by the reforms of Franklin Roosevelt.

    The entrepreneurial spirit and social innovation fostered by a market economy has benefited many and should not be overly encumbered by unnecessary or stifling regulations. But left to its own devices and human weakness (let’s call it sin), the market too often disintegrates into greed and corruption, as the Wall Street financial collapse painfully reveals. Capitalism needs rules, or it easily becomes destructive. A healthy, balanced relationship between free enterprise on the one hand, and public accountability and regulation, on the other, is morally and practically essential. Government should encourage innovation, but it must also limit greed.

    The behavior of too many on Wall Street is a violation of biblical ethics. The teachings of Christianity, Judaism, and other faiths condemn the greed, selfishness, and cheating that have been revealed in corporate behavior over decades now, and denounce their callous mistreatment of employees. Read your Bible.

    The strongest critics of the Wall Street gamblers call it putting self-interest above the public interest; the Bible would call it a sin. I don’t know about the church- or synagogue-going habits of the nation’s top financial managers, but if they do attend services, I wonder if they ever hear a religious word about the practices of arranging huge personal bonuses and escape hatches while destroying the lives of people who work for them. We now need wisdom from the economists, prudence from the business community, and renewal courses on the common good from the nation’s religious leaders. It’s time for the pulpit to speak — for the religious community to bring the Word of God to bear on the moral issues of the American economy. The Bible speaks of such things from beginning to end, so why not our pastors and preachers?

  • Please warn your friends about this scam!

    Still shamelessly posting other folk’s stuff until I can think of something to say that wouldn’t put everyone to sleep or get them talking about politics. I thought al_son would find this one especially amusing:

    Image

    Thanks, sis! Whatever in the world would I do without you to keep me giggling?

  • I love my friends, email buddies & customers!

    Edit: bloggers with more knowledge of these things than I have identified the individuals in this video as a (obviously extremely capable & convincing) comedy team from Austrailia…..

    I hit the trifecta with this one–she is all three! I hope this makes you giggle as much as I did when I saw it:

    Are you smarter than a 5th grader? Obviously this guy isn’t!

    To all you budding maritime engineers — now pay attention!!!

    THE FRONT FELL OFF

    On August 19th 2007, an oil tanker off the coast of Australia split in two, dumping 20,000 tons of crude oil.

    Senator Collins, a member of the Australian Parliament, appeared on a TV news program to reassure the Australian public.

    This actual interview is so funny, you’d swear it was a Saturday Night Live or Monty Python skit.

    It just proves….. Once a politician, always a politician!

    Enjoy!

  • No question about how I will vote here!

    EDIT: Thanks everyone for your efforts. Apparently the deleting cookies to vote more often than 30 minutes thing worked pretty well–Hendrickson won…..sigh

    Now, I wouldn’t have minded losing to LBJ. They are a public school science academy in a huge urban school district where leadership has been a tremendous challenge for quite some time and their band really ROCKS!


    If you go to this site, you can help the high school where our children attended earn $500 in percussion equipment. They are  the round 2 finalists, Connally HS band and they need you to vote for them to win! The percussion instructor also directs the jazz band that our son played in for three years. This man had a chance to be the head band director when the position was open earlier this year and chose to continue working with the drumline, JV and the jazz bands instead. I would LOVE to see these hard working kids, parents and instructors earn that percussion equipment!
    Viewers may vote once every 30 minutes per URL address. You can also watch the performances again! The voting ends Tuesday at noon.


    Edit: Thanks, everyone who has voted & thanks, Doll for recommending, too!

    Oh, almost forgot my dues for the den:

    chocassortmnt