The dishes get done,
The kids get fed,
Nothing gets broken,
No angry words get said,
This is a good day.
The dishes get done,
The kids get fed,
Nothing gets broken,
No angry words get said,
This is a good day.
Take the time to reflect on the hard work you have done today.
Take the time to reflect on the many blessings you have received through your hard work.
Take the time to reflect on the All Mighty that gives you the opportunity to work, the ability to work and the blessings you receive from that work.
In His name, have compassion for those who do not have the opportunity to work, have not been taught to work, or do not have the ability to work. In His name, all things are possible, but without compassion, in other words – charity, nothing good is possible.
Take the time to reflect…
* For more from the artist, visit Ayla’s Allegories.
Be careful what you tear down and throw away, for tomorrow it may be just the thing you need.
I am deeply saddened that during a time when our youth are being bombarded by so many ill winds, good organizations with a desire to help our youth are under attack. Sadly too often the attacks come from politically driven individuals who have done little to inform themselves before slandering the organizations.
This, I believe, is the case in the recent attacks on the Girl Scouts of America. In my blog Entitlement is a Symptom, I discuss the benefits of having a community of loving adults aiding in the development of our youth. I believe that this is a role in which organizations like Girl Scouts can play a beneficial part.
To read one account of some “scary” activity or association should not make us publicly condemn the whole. Nor should we read an account of something “disagreeable” happening in a worldwide organization with similar name, and assume it applies to our local group. While everyone has a right to develop their own opinions, it is irresponsible to do a small bit of research, and then publicly criticize and condemn the whole.
When a public leader or politician lashes out at a group like Girl Scouts, the consequences can be far reaching. In just a few unkind or under-informed words, long term damage can occur. How sad is it then, when the effects trickle down and a young person in need no longer has available resources to help mold their futures in positive ways.
We are not a nation of “one size fits all” and this especially applies to ideological beliefs. We do not have to agree with every belief or principle of our neighbor. Our neighbor should not be labeled as someone evil just because they don’t vote the same way we do. There is enough real evil in the world without creating the perception of more.
The desire to slander an individual or a group based on our own precepts does not make us good people. Politicians need to remember that while calling names and slinging ideological mud might temporarily rally supporters, it does not make them likable. Worse yet, they are acting and sounding like lunatics and giving credibility to hatemongering. So in the end, their politically driven tirade results in a negative effect on the youth who need the resources provided by Girl Scouts and similar organizations, as well as in the encouragement of the radical ideology of hate.
There must be a better way.
Note: I considered adding links to articles detailing the nature of these attacks, but there were just too many of them. If you would like to read them, search “Girl Scouts Under Fire” and you will find many from which to choose.
It appears to me that a lot of Christians aren’t reading their scriptures and taking Christ’s message to heart, as there is way to much fear and loathing going around especially in the political world.
Here are two of my favorites scriptures from the King James version of the Bible.
“Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” John 14:27
“A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.” John 13:34
You notice that the second scripture does not specify which “type” of people to love, but instead infers to love all.
Do not believe that cheap things do not cost someone a great deal. Or that the great bargain does not have hidden costs.
Most importantly, be careful not to trade freedom for seemingly free stuff. The price of freedom is too great to barter away on trinkets and temporary pleasures.
I read an article claiming presidential candidate Rick Santorum does not believe that health insurance should cover amniocentesis because the results often lead to abortion.
Yes amniocentesis has led to abortions, but it has also given parents an opportunity to prepare for children with special needs months before the child comes home from the hospital.
I have been blessed to know a couple mothers who truly valued this time to prepare. In one case, the mother was able to research her baby’s condition, prepare her home and family, sell her car and buy a minivan, and most especially prepare herself for the complications that might take her baby’s life.
She was encouraged to have an abortion many times during her pregnancy; her decision against abortion was questioned and often condemned by those in association with her. However, she stood firm. Her child was given a very slim chance of making it to full term and she prepared herself. Once he made it to term, he was given a very slim chance of survival and again she prepared herself. The well prepared mother took each day as a blessing and cherished every moment. She rallied her family around her and continued to educate herself and her family on what might come next. After nearly three years of being told her child might not survive, she invited all her supporters to her son’s second birthday party. He was a joy to watch, a blessing to all. He still is.
If insurance companies do not pay for this procedure, women are much less likely to undergo it. As with any procedure, it should be the woman’s choice. Comprehensive insurance should be comprehensive. It should leave the decision of which procedure is needed up to the doctor and the patient, not up to bureaucrats and accountants.
The discussion of abortions being linked to amniocenteses should not be centered on whether the procedure is covered; it should be centered on changing the medical community’s feelings that they should encourage abortion when the chances of “normal” life are slim for the child. This is what needs to change.
Abortion may be legal and may be in some cases be in the woman’s “best” medical interest, but to encourage it for the goal of limiting possible emotional suffering or struggle later on, should not be the outcome of amniocentesis. Amniocentesis is a test and while warring against it is easier than changing attitudes, it is not the solution but the cop-out.
I have just read of the new law waiting to be signed by the governor of Virginia. It would require a woman seeking an abortion to undergo an transvaginal ultrasound. The first article I read was an outraged editorial opposing the law, but what upset me was the rhetoric of the proponents for this law. It reminded me of other times civil liberties have been violated by the government. I searched and found to my dismay that versions of this law were being considered in other states as well.
Regardless of which side of the abortion debate you stand on, I ask you to consider whether this rhetoric, and the intent behind the proposed Virginia law, is not an abhorrent violation of moral decency and civil liberty?
It appears that the intent of the forced transvaginal ultrasound is to ensure that a woman seeking an abortion fully understands what she has chosen to do. This seems reasonable on the surface, but as with any controversial issue, the debate around this policy has become embroiled with little reason and volumes of appalling opinion.
So I would like to pose three comparisons; and please bear in mind I am not trying to make light of any of these issues.
Okay so let’s assume you believe abortion is murder. A legalized murder, kind of like suicide is for all intents self-murder and is not illegal, mainly because you can’t prosecute the deceased for their own death. (I would hope you would not prosecute anyone for attempted murder if they failed to succeed with their suicide.) So you can’t stop the woman from seeking a legal murder, but you feel you must impress upon her that she is killing a living being. So you force her to recognize the beating heart by “penetrating” her body against her will. This violation is justified because you are trying to prevent a murder.
Next let say you would like to go on a hunger strike, maybe even to oppose abortion. So you set out to starve yourself until abortion is abolished.
Others would try to talk you out of it, but to no avail. So the state steps in and force feeds you through a tube, preventing you from murdering yourself. This is justified because the state is preventing a murder, a self-murder, but still a murder.
Finally let say you are a terrorist and you are planning to murder many people because they teach principles that are abhorrent to your moral beliefs. You are captured but your partners are not. So the government steps in and tortures you so you will divulge information which might put to an end your murderous plans. This torture is justified because it might save many lives. The government recognizes that you really don’t fully understand the magnitude of your actions, that your moral beliefs are misguided and you are obviously incapable of fully understanding what you have chosen to do.
It is not my intent to weigh in on the abortion debate, again it is the rhetoric that upsets me. Have we learned nothing from our past? Is there not a better way to save lives or are Machiavellian ideas to always be the justification for the disregard of civil liberty?
Eleven years ago, I felt the strong impression I needed to homeschool my two children. While the concept of homeschooling was not a new one for me, it was one I was sure I would not pursue for many valid reasons. However, I am not one to lightly disregard a deep, penetrating impression and so I began to reevaluate my conclusions.
Unlike many of the people deciding to homeschool at the time, I did not make the decision based on religious concerns, or concerns about the many “ills” a child might face in public school. No, I simply took a closer look at my pre-school enrolled son and realized that he was already getting frustratingly bored with the limitations of group learning.
Never have I doubted the rightness of my decision, although it has been a tough road to travel. The blessings have been boundless and the joy amidst the struggle, immense.
A sense of relief has now been added to my list of homeschooling emotions. For while, I did not make my decision based on the policies of public schools, I find myself immensely relieved that I homeschool after reading a few news articles concerning the public school world.
I decided to write this post and put this list together after my daughter came and asked me to check on a story about school lunches she heard on the radio this morning. I also Google searched for stories about absentee punishments, but in this case the stories that popped up were terribly sad and from other countries. On that topic, I do know of one Colorado school which has a policy in place whereby the student’s grade will be demoted each time the student misses class more than the allowed absent days. Furthermore, excused absences which are only accepted when signed by a doctor, also count against the total.
When did we, as parents, sign over our rights and accountability for our children to the school?
Do children have the same legal rights as adults or are their rights lessened just as their punishments for crimes are?
Does the government owe our youth an education if the taxpayers are paying for it?
The first moment I would like to share came when I was nine years old. My mother, who was running marathons at the time, had a grave concern that I was going to grow up to be overweight, and thus decided to entice me to get fit with a bribe She offered to take me to New York to participate in an all-female 10K, but only if I could run the distance without stopping beforehand. The jog around Central Park was much more pleasant than the training runs, due mostly to the fact that my mom left me with some slower runners who were prone to take walking breaks. This moment in time taught me I could do anything if I tried hard enough, and that breaks make tasks much more pleasant to accomplish.
Jump ahead a handful of years to the summer when I was fourteen. While my grandfather had dairy cows, a couple of his brothers had beef cattle and Quarter Horses. I loved to ride, and would ride as often as I could convince someone to get me to a horse. I had ridden with my mom and dad, with my cousins and brothers, even with a few uncles, but never with my grandfather, at least not since I was an infant in his arms. That summer a unique thing happened, my grandfather took to the saddle one more time. With his older brother, and three grown nephews, he decided to revisit the days when he still used a horse to get the work done. The men all had saddles, bridles and young mounts. There was only one horse to be left behind, a thirty year old cattle pony which my mother had trained decades before. My mom, neglecting to ask me or the men for permission, found an old broken bridle and without much warning, hoisted me up on the beautiful, wise, saddle-less mare. I was instructed to let the horse do the work, hold on and try my best not embarrass my mom. Then off I went, chasing cows and jumping ditches right alongside my grandfather. I had never before been as humbled or proud as I was on that day; the day I learned to hold on, stay quiet and cherish the moment. Although my grandfather lived many more decades that was the last time he rode a horse, and the first time I really knew he was proud of me.
My next moment unfolded during the very first days of my sophomore year in college. Over the summer, I had worked at a camp in Alabama teaching girls how to ride. I had earned very little money at the camp, in truth only enough to cover the cost of unlimited riding lessons at college which I so desperately wanted, but which wasn’t covered by my student loans and grants. It was a hard year to work at a summer camp, record rains kept us fighting mud and humidity. Plus I had suffered a broken toe just a week into camp, causing me to limp through the remainder of the summer. To my horror, after a week back at school and back in an English, rather than a Western saddle, my knee was painfully swollen and a trip to the doctor was in order. As it turned out, all the limping from the broken toe had aggravated an old injury to the point where surgery was advised. However, surgery was not an option for me. Besides the fact that knee surgery wasn’t as nice and tidy as it is now; I didn’t have the insurance or funds to cover it. Riding was therefore replaced by physical therapy. Therapy taught me that I could overcome the obstacle of pain and find a replacement for my lost love of riding. After months of working with the school physical therapist, I became healthy enough to train for the New York Marathon.
So with a marathon completed, I moved on to my next challenge: US Marine Corps Officer Candidate School. In a mere seven weeks of the ten week program, I was left with tendonitis in all my toes, a torn muscle in my shoulder, a chipped tooth and various other minor injuries; all of which had not stopped my desire to be a Marine. But then flu-like symptoms, unexplained leg swelling and dizziness set in and I was done. I decided that leaving on my own terms rather than in a wheel chair wasn’t quitting, it was just recognizing that my body wasn’t suited for what my brain wanted to do. That summer I learned how to laugh instead of cry when I was in pain, even when the pain was from the heartache of leaving something behind.
There are so many more moments in time I could share, but I will finish with one simple moment that occurred today when I was able to exercise for fifteen minutes on my elliptical machine. Four years ago, I was advised by my doctor to take things slowly if I wanted to manage my fibromyalgia. When I asked what she meant, she replied, “Five minutes at a time.” I wasn’t even sure how a person exercised for only five minutes at a time, but I was determined to learn. I made a goal: have more energy when I turn fifty than I did when I turned forty. I have had to overcome a lot of frustration. I have had to find a place to start and then I had to start again and again. I have had to get creative and humble in my approach. First I bought a cane so I would no longer feel so helpless when the fatigue hit. Second, I bought a spinning wheel, for while I could not exercise without fatigue, and a strange feeling of guilt; I could spin yarn for hours and feel productive while doing it. Finally, I gave myself permission to find strength in my weaknesses and opportunities in my limitations.
In our youth, time seemed endless, yet we rushed. In our maturity, time seems brief, and we savor the moments we have left.