Jul 28, 2011

Shipwrecked

This little story has been making recent email rounds.  The moral is useful, especially for anyone going through hard times.

The only survivor of a shipwreck washed up on a small, uninhabited island. He prayed feverishly for God to rescue him. Every day he scanned the horizon for help, but nothing changed. 
Shipwreck

Over time he he built a little hut out of driftwood and palm fronds to protect himself from the elements, and to store his few possessions. 

One day, after scavenging for food, he arrived home to find his little hut in flames, with smoke curling up to the sky.  Stunned with disbelief, grief, and anger, he cried out, "God!  How could you let this happen?"

Early the next day, he was awakened by the sound of a ship's horn!  It had come to rescue him! "How did you know I was here?" the survivor asked his rescuers. 

"We saw your smoke signal," they replied. 


The Moral of This Story: It's easy to get discouraged when things are going badly, but we shouldn't lose heart, because God is at work in our lives, even at our darkest moments.
  


Remember that the next time your little hut seems to be burning to the ground. It just may be a smoke signal that summons the Grace of God. 



Jul 26, 2011

Cheers for those angel messages!

Our first hike in the Sierras a couple of weeks ago had to be aborted.  The very name of our destination, Saucer Lake, just over the ridge, inspired my 11-year old grandson, my good friend, Margaret, and me with eagerness.  The hike started well enough, over granite boulders, through manzanita bushes, across noisy rivulets of snowmelt. 

It had been a late summer in the mountains, though.  As recently as two weeks before our adventure, Echo lake still boasted ice.  As we now ascended, bits of snowfields lurked over parts of the trail.  At first we worked around them, picking up the switchback a few yards further on.  The incline sharpened, the snowfields became broader and increasingly treacherous -- as in steep and slippery, with very hard boulders or worse, cliffs, at their bases.  

A small snowfield -- fun and safe to slide down
I’d begun praying quite earnestly about safety probably half an hour before, when continuing the climb began to feel not right.  It was a humble prayer, just asking God to place each step so that She would be praised by this activity.  Neither did it feel right for Grandma (me) to be the one to say we needed to turn back.  So each time I was tempted, I prayed the more earnestly.

Finally, about 2/3 of the way up, we reached the largest snowfield yet.  We could not see where to pick up the trail on either the right or the left of it. 

Jul 25, 2011

Boots too small?

King of the snow cave (carved by a rivulet, between his feet)
What I'd like to draw your attention to here is not the snow cave, although standing triumphantly on its thin arched roof was the purpose of the photo.  Rather the boots.

Wonderful, comfortable, hiking boots

It's the boots that will be outgrown by next summer.

I was thinking today how with kids it's easy to know what no longer fits.  Wrists hang out of sleeves, pant cuffs creep upward, the shoes are too tight, and it's obvious.

Somewhere into adulthood we we start accumulating clothes that used to be passed along to friends, relatives, or the local thrift store.  Closets gradually begin to bulge, not so subtly demanding a sorting.

It isn't all that different with our thinking.  As kids grow and learn, they discard outgrown thinking -- tooth fairies and monsters under the bed, and cute

Jul 20, 2011

Music to the eyes

I don't know how this works, but perhaps you will agree that it is beautiful.  As one person put it, "Music to the eyes."

Jul 7, 2011

Herding Cats?

Nope.  Not herding cats.  Training them.  Or rather, finding out what they like to do, and then rewarding them for it.

I grew up with dogs and cats together.  I can think of three different pairs.  They would snuggle together in a sunny spot on the floor on a winter's day.  Or cuddle together on the couch.  Yes, we did allow our adopted greyhound on the couch.

The most fun was watching these creatures wrestle -- the dog being careful not to overwhelm the cat; and the cat being careful to keep her claws sheathed.  Over and over, round and round they'd go.

Cats who perform is a whole different circus.  Yet here's a guy who has figured it out.  Hope you enjoy their entertainment.


Jul 2, 2011

Meet the Mayor of Mississauga

My neighbor was complaining the other day of her curtailed activities now that she "is up in years."  She didn't want to hear another perspective, at least not at that time. 

Seniors have lots of jokes about aging, and all of them accept the premise that aging includes limits, vulnerability, and diminishing faculties.  So the jokes are an effort to make the best of a bad situation.

There used to be an upbeat TV show called, "Life begins at 80."  Week after week the host interviewed lively, busy octogenarians.  These folks did not placidly accept restrictions on their abilities and capacities to do good.  Most of them led active and interesting lives.

Here, from Canada, is a contemporary role model.  It's so refreshing to meet someone whose life quietly challenges these negative assumptions.