Category Archives: malta

Separated from The Sweetheart at 30,000 ft



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Constant togetherness is fine…for Siamese twins.

It finally happened.
I was afraid it would.
We had been fortunate. Side by side. Through thick and thin, weathering the turbulence as many have before us.
Maybe it was inevitable, maybe it was fate.

Maybe we didn’t get our tickets in time.

Separated from The Sweetheart at 30,000 ft. After 36 years of blissful togetherness.
Make that twice in the same trip separated. We will go backward with this one and talk about the second flight first.

Because we can.

Heading down the aisle of the Airbus 330, I was not excited one bit that I was in the middle section of the plane. The good part was that I had the aisle and The Sweetheart was, sort of, across from me, up just a wee bit but basically across from each other. He also had the aisle seat. (Now for all of you thinking this wasn’t separation, you just do not know me. I have overcome many fears over the last five years of flying but I have always had my security blanket, a.k.a., The Sweetheart, right beside me.) He was there if I had questions such as, but not limited to:
  • Why is the plane making that noise?

  • Did the landing gear not come down?

  • Can we crash because of turbulence?

  • Turn my air up. Turn my air down. (My arms are too short to reach it for crying out loud!)

  • Are you getting a Coke? With ice? Are you going to ask for ice? You ask first. (European flight attendants do not smile when you ask for ice. Spoiled Americans.)

  • Are you going to the bathroom? Yes, you are going to the bathroom because I need to go and I refuse to lock the door in an airplane bathroom for fear of getting stuck for the next eight hours inside that torture chamber. (No, we do not go in together. He stands outside as if waiting his turn but his real job is to make sure no one else tries to come in. He failed at this on our flight from Chicago to Vienna but that is another story for another time.)

I forgot to mention the most important reason we cannot be separated on an airplane: I must have the arm of the person next to me available for digging in my fingernails should it become necessary. So, you see, I need him.
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I sat down and waited; The Sweetheart sat down sort-of-across-but-not-exactly-from-me.
Here they came. A couple, about our age, early 50’s I would guess. It took all of three seconds to realize we were not going to get along.
I am allergic to B.O. Terribly allergic. How is that possible you ask? Do I break out in a rash? No. But I do have trouble breathing maybe to the point of hyperventilating if I am in the room, just the same room mind you, of someone with Body Odor. This was no normal body odor. It was body odor times two. You wouldn’t have recognized it by sight either; they looked like fairly educated people but obviously did not believe in either bathing regularly or odor controlling products that you can get OTC at a reasonable price. Today, you can even make your own without all the added chemicals and mercury!
I looked at The Sweetheart who was all smiles because a young attractive girl had taken the seat next to the window, next to him. I tried to give him The Look to let him know all was NOT well.
I whispered. That didn’t work; he couldn’t hear me.

I tried just mouthing the words, with extreme exaggeration and eye movements, “THEY. HAVE. B. O.!”

“What? I can’t hear you?”
“B.O.!! It’s bad!”
He finally caught on as did the two women behind him who were chuckling at this point.
I was doomed. At least eight hours with Pig Pen and his wife who had just taken off her shoes and put on the dirtiest I-think-they-used-to-be-white socks I had ever seen.

She was settling in for the long haul.

The only good thing? A seat between us. I’m sure, by looking at me, they were as happy as I was because I couldn’t refrain from using some sort of clothing mask. I already had my collar pulled up to one side of my face and was pretending as if the fragrance of my fabric softener was so pleasant I might want to do a TV commercial. I doubt my subtlety was working but I didn’t care. If someone was going to flaunt their stench so that an entire airplane had to suffer then I must take drastic measures. I had to protect myself, my stomach, my watering eyes and especially my breathing apparatuses from giving out on me in my time of extreme need.
At this point, all of my Essential Oil friends are asking, “Where are THEY?” Unfortunately, on the return flight, I had packed them in my checked baggage. I know, right? Never again will I board a plane without Thieves or Stress Away!
Finally, I resorted to praying. (You knew I would try to make this spiritual didn’t you?) It went something like this:

Dear Lord, I wondered if you would do me a favor? I know it is a first-world problem and I have much to be thankful for. But if you could see fit, before this plane takes off, to bump me to First Class I would be forever grateful. If you think I am being overly dramatic, how about just sending a slight rushing wind to blow continually to my right for this overseas, extremely long flight? Okay, I will take anything at this point that gets my mind off of the fact that I could close my eyes and easily assume I am in a men’s locker room. After the game. Thank you in advance for anything you can do. Amen.

Thankfully, I believe He heard my prayer. Somehow it did get better and I eventually settled down to play Angry Birds and read a good book and hope that the in-flight meal didn’t contain any meat products. Of any kind.
The day before, we had flown out of Malta, in the Mediterranean, after three weeks of teaching and training in that beautiful island country. Here are a few more pictures if you have missed any of my posts. Gozo, Comino and the Blue Lagoon were absolutely amazing!
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The moral of this story? It has a second part! Tune in tomorrow, same Bat time, same Bat channel for the conclusion with the story from the FIRST flight. (Update! You can read Part 2 here!)

 

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The-Daniel-Fast-A-DevotionalThe Daniel Fast Devotional is still going strong! This week I was privileged to be a part of a podcast interview on the Apostolic Informer with Host Rob Barrow. He allowed me to talk about the book, how it came to be, what is a Daniel Fast, etc. and even give away a book or two. Folks, I don’t do well listening to my own voice, yikes. But Rob is doing a great job getting information on district happenings within the UPCI for Indiana and beyond. Take a listen here and get your copy of The Daniel Fast, A Devotional, today!

Sharing with Sunday Stillness, Weekend Brew, Dance with JesusHappiness is homemade, Making your home sing, Good Morning Mondays, Inspire Me Monday, Mama Moments Monday, Living Proverbs 31, Modest Monday, UNITE, Titus 2sday, Testimony Tuesday, Homemaking Linkup, A Little R & R, Wedded Wednesday, Happy and Blessed Home

A plea to the desperate

“I used to think the worst thing in life was to end up all alone. It’s not. The worst thing in life is to end up with people who make you feel all alone.” ~ Robin Williams

Sometimes the impact of LIFE hits hard. I spent the last two days in Catania, Sicily with The Sweetheart. The sweet missionaries we are staying with encouraged us to take a short trip to Sicily, it is so close to Malta, flights are cheap and it only takes 40 minutes to get there. We had hoped to meet up with some national pastors but their schedule didn’t work out this time. But we prayed we would be able to do more than just sight-see and God made a way for us to witness for His name (I’ll share that story soon!) and intercede in a desperate situation. This is a plea to the desperate.

Catania sits at the bottom of Mt. Etna and right on the Iconian Sea. The beauty is unsurpassed friends, it is breathtaking.

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We made a trek up to Mt. Etna, the largest active volcano in Europe. In the late 1600’s, the city of Catania was nearly wiped out by a volcanic eruption that took 16,000 of the 20,000 living in the city! We took a tour bus to the top, about 1 ½ hours straight up. I will write about that in a day or two…pictures are AH-MAZ-ING!

 Back on the ground the next morning we witnessed something entirely opposite.

Heading down Via Etnea, the main thoroughfare through Catania, we came upon a large gathering of people all looking upward and we were trying hard to focus on what had grabbed their attention.

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Then we saw him.

Dangling on a pedestal on top of a roof, four stories high, was a young, teenage boy about to take his own life. (You can see him at the very top, on the middle limestone pedestal with his leg hanging over the side.)

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We could see he was desperate, he kept motioning for those that were trying to talk him down to get back or he would jump.

I have never witnessed anything of this nature and The Sweetheart kept saying, “Let’s go, let’s just go, you don’t want this scene in your mind the rest of your life.” He was a nervous wreck but yet we knew we had to pray. Someone had to pray!!

We began to intercede for this young man, praying in the Holy Ghost and asking God to intervene on His behalf. There was no net, no fire department to help as of yet. Friends, it was intense.

What makes a soul so desperate to leave this earthly life?

This is the way of the lost soul. The soul without Jesus Christ. There is desperation, there is extreme anxiety and frustration. To them, there is nothing that will make it better; nothing you can do or say that will ease their hurt and anger. You can make no promise that they will believe.

The world is in turmoil. There is fear on every hand; threats of war, famine, unemployment, hunger, drought, and of course ISIS. It is real around the world, not just in places like Italy, Malta, South African and Libya. This danger is global and getting worse.

No wonder people who have no hope are intimidated by the enemy into thinking that suicide is their only recourse! The devil wants to put desperation and fear into every heart that will listen and then he stands there, ready to push them over the edge where we know, and he knows, is everlasting darkness.

We must rescue, we must intercede!

Watching this scene unfold before us, and praying as hard as we have ever prayed in our lives, a policeman and another unidentified man had crept up to the floor just below the young man. He could not see them since he was perched on this pedestal on his stomach with his legs dangling.

a plea to the desperateThe man you see in the blue t-shirt then jumped up to the ledge, risking his life for sure, and with all of his strength shoved the young man as hard as he could to the safety of the balcony.

And the crowd roars.

Are you feeling that desperation in your life at this moment? Have pressures from just trying to get by weighed you down so much that you see no way out? Friend, there is HOPE.

Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. “ 1 Peter 5:7.

Jesus Christ gave HIS LIFE so you wouldn’t ever have to take your own. When He died on Calvary’s cross, He did away with the need for sacrifice, He paid the price, the ultimate price for YOUR salvation and mine. Look at this promise He left with us:

“Before they call I will answer; while they are still speaking I will hear.” Isaiah 65:24.

There is nothing in this life worth taking matters into your own hands in desperation. Jesus truly offers a way out; He is the way! He promises to never leave or forsake us even though times are difficult; they may prove discouraging, frustrating and just plain hard at times. Yet He promises to walk with us through EVERYTHING, bringing Hope, Peace and Comfort in our most challenging circumstances.

“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the LORD, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:11.

Not only is there hope in this life but He offers eternal salvation and hope for eternity! Yes, things will get better even if it is not in this life. There is no peace that compares with the peace of God. It can carry you through ANYTHING!

“The LORD your God in your midst, the Mighty One, will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you with His love, He will rejoice over you with singing.” Zephaniah 3:17.

He will quiet you with His love; bringing the security that you are desperately seeking.  And then…Hope for today and the promise of living with our Savior in perfect peace for all eternity.

“He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever.” Revelation 21:4. NLT

If you are desperate today, please feel welcome to email me if you need guidance to a Bible-believing church or need prayer. Reach out to family, friends or a pastor; someone who will help you find Hope in Jesus Christ. He loves you more than you can imagine and desires to set you free and give joy unspeakable in the midst of your trouble.

If you are struggling with believing you are forgiven, or feel as if you cannot come back to God, please read my post If God has Forgiven me, why can’t I Forgive Myself here.

 

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A Message for My Three Sons on Mother’s Day

Yes, this is a Message for My Three Sons on Mother’s Day, it is addressed to my boys, who are no longer boys but grown men. I would love for you to peek over my shoulder…and share your own thoughts and memories!

I have missed a few birthdays down through the years. It seemed every time our church organization’s General Conference would roll around it would land on my middle son’s once-a-year celebration. He wasn’t particularly happy about spending it with a babysitter, or grandparents, but it didn’t seem to leave any lasting scars.

I have been out of the country for my own birthday twice in the last four years. I wasn’t so crazy about that and got a little experience of how he must have felt. He only had his two brothers, I only had The Sweetheart. Family seems to make every holiday just that much better.

This year I am celebrating Mother’s Day, my 34th Mother’s Day, out of the country with none of My Three Sons (or my sweet DIL) around the table.

I am melancholy.

So, since I cannot be with them in person, see their smiles, hear their jokes, and feel their presence, I thought I would write them a note. (Chances are pretty good I will not receive a Mother’s Day card in Malta…not that they aren’t thoughtful, there just wasn’t time.)message-my-three-sons-mothers-dayTo my eldest, Kyle Douglas: You were the firstborn. You had to endure my inexperience at being a mother; my youthful approach to life was a plus in many areas and a detriment in others. As far as your parents were concerned, you could do no wrong. Everything you would attempt or achieve was exciting to us as first-time parents and you went at it with reckless abandon.

Your wife-for-life, Rachel, (the little girl I never had), says you must have had the most wonderful childhood of anyone on Planet Earth because you want to relive it all the time. That makes me happy and yet I know it wasn’t perfect because I wasn’t perfect. What I did try to give you was a home that you could bring your friends to and not be embarrassed, a place to be safe and to be yourself, to know someone was rooting for you and that you were loved beyond measure.

We did a lot of cool things together for a couple of young folks. We saw Batman and Robin, a.k.a., Burt Ward and Adam West in person, got the autograph, attended Tom Browning’s perfect game and even met Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott and her dog Schottzie, spending a few minutes in her penthouse with her privately after a game. Hey, we even starred in the movie Hoosiers for crying out loud! (Okay, we didn’t star in it but we were there. Final Scene. Screaming like crazy…like crazy…Hoosiers.) 

Who says Mom wasn’t fun??

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Many special memories stand out but there isn’t room for them all. One that still makes me smile, and cringe all at the same time, was when you were about 12 and playing basketball in the front driveway with all of your neighborhood friends. I am sure I was in the kitchen making chocolate chip cookies and mixing healthy strawberry powder with water in your favorite Mr. Kool-Aid pitcher when I heard at least seven or eight blood-curdling screams of terror. I ran to the garage door to see who had broken a bone or needed stitches when you met me face to face with eyes as big as dinner plates.

“MOM! There’s a giant snake under the window!”

All the neighborhood boys were gathered around the biggest snake I had ever seen in person, without a cage and not under glass. He was busy though, very busy choking down a humongous frog for his lunch. He could not go anywhere and we were about to catch ourselves a big one.

The boys all wanted to “KILL IT!” themselves so I handed them a garden hoe. They couldn’t get within five feet.

“You do it, Mom. My mom does this all the time, don’t ya Mom?”

Right. All the time. Usually they are four or five inches long not five feet. (I also was a little uneasy that it might be a copperhead. They were popular in that wooded area where we lived. I knew I had to do something, I just wished Dad was home this time to be the hero.)

With the Sandlot gang cheering me on and My Three Sons waiting for me to save the day, I heaved that garden hoe over my head and swung down as hard as I could to chop off the head of that menacing creature. THUMP!

I missed.
Completely.

The second try was a little better and, well, I will spare you the gory details. Nevertheless, Mom was a hero. And we all know Kyle loves superheroes.

But snakes aren’t school problems, girlfriends, grades, bullies, student loans, water bills, mortgages and car payments. I couldn’t be there for everything that came along but tried to instill a love for God, His Word, the Church and others in you that would help you survive in an ever-changing world. You have made me proud of the man you are today, sacrificing what some would see as opportunities to instead bless the Kingdom and others. I hope you remember me (when I am old and senile) as that hero with a garden hoe that would do anything to save the day for you.

I have taken in and loved your Rachel as my own, enjoying every minute of having another girl in the house that would side with me and give me another vote in a home laden with testosterone. Thank you, Rachel, for being a friend and a confidante. Thank you for always loving Kyle’s brothers; they were six and twelve when you entered the picture and the three of you have only grown closer through the years.  So much so, that they were ready to disown their Big Brother when he moved their best friend and chef back to Tennesee. You always make our family pictures look better!

To my middle son, Kristopher Ryan: Who always thought his name was Kristopher Kristopher Elkins because we couldn’t say his name just once to get his attention. He was elated to learn he had a real middle name!

Ever the impetuous and impulsive child, you have brought even more life into our little family and kept us forever on our toes. I could listen to you talk all day long with your little-bit-of-a-lisp and love for “r’s” with a Boston accent. (I should mention you outgrew that by first grade.) You were all boy and seemed to have to get up every day and remind the world that you had arrived and were here to stay.

Never one to be ignored, I will never forget the time you wanted so badly to talk to our pastor and tugged and tugged on his jacket only to be told to wait by the other adults surrounding him. That wasn’t enough for a four year old so you innocently wound your fist and threw it for all it was worth…unfortunately your aim was perfect and this calm and proper man had to excuse himself to catch his breath and regain his composure.

Everything you did was with gusto.

  • Climbing on top of refrigerators
  • Climbing INTO refrigerators and closing the door
  • Setting things on fire that were not meant to burn
  • Setting yourself on fire with curling irons and having to explain to the hospital that it was an accident
  • Yanking your own arm out of socket just by throwing a fit to see Chuck E Cheese
  • Calling policemen to our house in the middle of the night with just a light switch and a garage door opener
  • Getting beat up on the last day of school
  • Using duct tape to stick  your baby brother to the wall…two feet off the ground
  • Breaking your arm while roller-blading through a golf course
  • Letting your best friend run over your leg with a golf cart so you could spend the summer in a walking boot
  • Hanging suspended on cliffs in South America
  • Trespassing, literally, on the famous St. Andrews golf course in Scotland
  • Singing Chris Tomlin songs in a pub in Ireland
  • And jumping out of perfectly good airplanes all have brought life and laughter to our family for the last 28 years.

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I’ve seen your frustration make you stronger, even when at the moment you wanted to tear the enemy apart with your bare hands. Thankfully, you knew how to pray.

One of my fondest memories of you making a difficult situation more lighthearted was our first summer after we started pastoring our first church. Our new home had a swimming pool and you were in charge of keeping it crystal clean and clear. You learned it quickly until someone at the church suggested you could make your hair more blonde by adding even MORE chemicals, or better yet, just pour it straight on your hair.

You did.
It didn’t.
Make it blonde that is.
It turned it bright orange.  Just in time for your grandfather’s funeral the same week.

I have always had a tendency to stick up for you boys when I probably should have let Dad have his way…so to speak. I couldn’t help it; it was just too funny showing up at the funeral home, and at church, with carrot top hair.

You make every day a little brighter with your phone calls. When Mrs. Perfect comes along someday, I know we will not get as many of those but I will cherish them for now. Your, “What’s up?” is still a highlight of my day.

I know with your nursing degree you will be the one expected to take care of your parents in their old age. I apologize for that in advance but whatever happens to me, even if I am cranky, hateful and cannot control my faculties, I want you to remember one thing:

Remember the Nightingale Pledge you took as an RN…especially this part, “and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug.”  I will sleep much better at night.

To the Baby, Korey Ross: I apologize up front for calling you The Baby…again. But to me you will always be the last but not the least. Everyone knows we didn’t plan for a #3 but it sure has been nice to have cute nicknames for the blog! (Whoever heard of My Two Sons??) We would not have been complete as a family without you.

You entered our world quietly and have lived your life that way, unassuming, unpretentious, and never making a scene. As a baby, you were adored even by your brothers. Who knew? Possibly spreading apart your arrivals had something to do with that but you have made such an impression on each of them that even with one, six years your senior and another one eleven, you have managed to be someone they both call not just a brother but a best friend.

You have been through much for your 23 years and have always made us proud of the way you handled adversity and conflict. As a pastor’s son we NEVER worried about you sharing things that were told in confidence, NEVER worried about you eavesdropping or whispering secrets to others. And to your credit, others knew they didn’t have to worry about you breaking that confidence. You have always been trustworthy.

I always appreciated the way you put up with being #3. With the first baby, parents are ever-so-cautious about every little thing. With the second they let up a little on the “He’ll choke on that!!” but seem to lay down more rules and guidelines. By the time #3 comes along…well…we all have seen the T-shirts by now.

#1 made the rules
#2 was the reason we had rules
#3 the rules don’t apply to me

I remember one time when I was cutting your hair, I was clipping along pretty good. I had cut your older brother’s hair through the Doogie Howser era and had given him a trademark with those flying scissors. You, though, had never trusted me with an electric trimmer. I was almost finished, cleaning up the neck area when I saw a place that I had missed just to the left of your ear. Without thinking, (I do that a lot), I just went ahead and cleaned it up. The only problem was that I didn’t change the guard on the trimmer and it was still set short for neck trimming not hair cutting.

Oops.

I wish we had owned iPhone’s then to have recorded your teenage reaction to an amateur barber’s faux pas. Priceless. (This picture was taken years before, obviously, but still appropriate. Notice your brother trying to get attention as always.)

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I didn’t make mistakes too often but when I did…they were noteworthy.

My reminder that “it grows back” was little comfort at that moment.

You are blessed with a talent sent from above when you pick up that guitar; a great musician and worship leader, talented in so many areas and a blessing to any church, I thank God for that every day. I pray you will remember me for my desire to see you used in the Kingdom and introducing you to the literary world: showing you that a nap and a Louis L’Amour book could revive even the worst day. (Throw in a John Wayne movie and chips and salsa and it’s a comeback!)

That you can achieve whatever you set your mind to but should always seek the will of God in all things. I pray you remember that money cannot buy happiness and it is only necessary for the necessities in life. People that can be bought are not worth your money and definitely not your time. And most of all, your job in my golden years will be to sit beside me, whenever possible, and take your turn to read to me. Berenstein Bears will be just fine by then. We have plenty of those.

It’s true. Family is the best and we all feel as if we have the best. I miss my FOUR kids terribly when I am gone for long stretches of time but I also know they are adults and have their own lives to enjoy. I am thankful to be a part of that whenever time and distance allow, you all are the joys of my life.

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Thank you for making my Mother’s Day special just by being the great kids you are and loving me whether I am young or old, skinny or fat, a brunette or white-haired senior citizen. If you aren’t kind to Momma? God will get ya for that!

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And if you aren’t familiar with the popular 60’s sitcom, My Three Sons, here is a snippet of the theme song!