Just a Normal Day

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I try to send get well cards to folks I know who aren’t feeling well. Sometimes I do better than others. This past week I realized I had gotten behind and when I went to the store I purchased ten cards for people I know who are having serious health issues.

*A young mother of two had a stroke (she’s only 28).

*A friend’s brother is having complications from diabetes.

* Two young men I know (both are in their 40′s….if you are reading this and you are under 30 that may not seem young to you but believe me, it is!) have serious back issues.

* A former employer has been diagnosed with lung cancer.

* A friend’s mother had hip replacement surgery and while recovering the hip popped out and she had to have surgery again.

Every Sunday when I get my church bulletin it seems there is someone new added to the prayer list. Every time I pray it seems my list of those with health problems gets longer and longer. Every day there are people who are struggling just to have a normal day.

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Sending cards and praying are two things we can do to help those who are ill but there is so much more! For more ideas about how to serve others pick up a copy of Beyond Casseroles: 505 Ways to Encourage a Chronically Ill Friend’ by Lisa Copen. It’s full of wonderful ideas! Here are just a few.

1. Put food in disposable containers with a note that says it doesn’t have to be returned.

2. Add stickers to envelopes for a cheerful touch.

3. Arrange for your friend’s kids to have a night with your children.

4. Don’t make a person into a project.

5. Ask, “Would you be willing to talk to a friend of mine who has recently been diagnosed with a chronic illness and offer her some encouragement?” It makes one feel good to know that her experience can offer someone else hope and that God still has a purpose for her life.

6. Wash his car and put a little note inside for him to find later.

7. Remember important anniversaries, both the good and the bad. No one else will.

8. Ask, “Do you want company the day that you wait for the test results? I could come over for a couple of hours.”

9. “No matter how little you have, you can always give some of it away.” ~Catherine MarshallJust listen . . . until it hurts to not say anything. And then listen some more.

10. Ask her, “How do you feel God is working through-or despite-this illness in your life? I’m interested.”

11. Ask, “What do you wish people understood about your illness?”

12. Don’t make her feel guilty about things that she cannot do.

13. Treat her to a gift of movie rentals via postal mail through a service ($7-15 a month).

14. Ask, “Would you be comfortable with having your name on a prayer list, so that others can pray for you?” Don’t assume.

15. Instead of saying, “I will pray for you,” say, “I’d like to pray for you right now, if that’s okay.”

16. Mop the floors.

17. Ask if she would be interested in writing something for the church newsletter, maybe even about the subject of living with chronic illness
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18. Ask, “Do you have an errand I can run for you before coming over?”

19. Ask her to do spontaneous things, like go to a concert in the park, or just for a picnic. She may be more likely to participate since she knows if it’s a good day or a bad day.

20 For a unique gift, provide brightly colored paper plates, napkins, and utensils in a gift bag with a note that says “For when you don’t feel like doing dishes.”

21. Get her a pretty box to keep all of her notes of encouragement. Remind her to get it out and read things when she is feeling down.

22. Be her advocate. If you are at an event and walking/seating is an issue because of her disability, ask her if she’d like you to take care of it. If she says you can, be firm but not rude. Don’t embarrass her by making accusations of discrimination or by making a scene.

23. Ask, “Would you be interested in a prayer partner from our church?”

24. Purchase matching coffee mugs for you and your friend, and then commit to pray for one another each morning while using them.

25. Say, “While you’re in the hospital I’d be happy to take care of your pet.”


Have a great Gratituesday and here’s hoping you have a normal day! Join us for Gratituesday at Heavenly Homemakers!


Summer Time, Ice Tea, lemondade, and a Window Fan

It’s been really hot here lately. This morning I went outside and thought I would melt before I could get back inside my air conditioned house.

My grandparents lived in a 100 year old farmhouse that didn’t have a lot of modern conveniences. My grandfather would joke and tell me to come back and visit him in December if I wanted air conditioning.  I spent a lot of time at their house in my younger years and while I know it was hot, it never seemed unbearably so. The large trees in their yard provided plenty of shade  and there were always box fans in the windows. Grandma had an unlimited supply of iced tea and lemonade (both were homemade, not store bought). They also had a swing on the front porch where I sipped lemonade and played “guess which color car will go by next” with my grandmother. Summer time at their house was a place to make memories, no matter how high the thermometer rose.

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My friend Dorothy has a son who is in Iraq.  His name is Chris and she spoke with him this weekend and according to him, our heat wave is nothing.  I looked it up online and today in Iraq it’s supposed to get up to 113.  Glad I’m not there (for lots of reasons), but so proud of those who are there serving our country! (Keep your cool, Chris, you’ll be home in 70 days!)

After I looked up the temperature in Iraq I did a little research about how hot it gets in Kentucky. Did you know that on July 28th, 1930 it reached 114 degrees in Greensburg, Kentucky? Now that’s what I call hot!

More Hot Air

My parents had an air conditioner at our house. It was the kind that fit in a window and froze you if you sat next to it but it never really managed to cool the whole house. Years later we had one of those units upstairs at my parent’s house. My husband and I were living upstairs and the air conditioning system they had just wasn’t strong enough to cool our bedroom in the summer months. When we replaced the old heating and cooling system my husband removed the old window unit from our bedroom window. Unfortunately, he dropped it. Fortunately no one was beneath it when it fell and splattered into a million pieces.

Now days most folks won’t consider buying or building a house that doesn’t have central heat and air, and I am one of those folks. I don’t like being too hot or too cold. I’m like Goldilocks…I want everything just right.

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We took “the granddaughter” (I can call her that because I only have one!) to see Toy Story 3 last night  (really cute movie) and the air was turned up so high in the theatre that I had goose bumps and was shaking all over. Why in the world does it have to be 30 degrees in the movies when it’s June and 90 degrees outside?

Another place I’ve noticed that can’t regulate the temperature to suit me (or other folks) is in schools. I have worked in schools all across the state of Kentucky and it drives me crazy to see kids wearing sweatshirts in May because the air conditioning is so cold it freezes them.

Okay, I’ve complained enough about the weather for one day. Now it’s your turn. Is it too hot or too cold where you are? Have you ever been somewhere and almost turned into an ice cube because the air conditioning was too high? Do you have summer time memories of your grandparent’s house and did they have air conditioning? Let us hear about it!

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Love Without End, Amen

Fun Friday Links – the Father’s Day edition

So, I had a very similar moment to Teresa’s moment last week… around about Thursday.  I stopped mid-stream of whatever was happening at that moment and thought, “OH NO… it’s June already, and what if Father’s Day is on Sunday… I’m not prepared!”  I was relieved to find that I had another week.

And of course I used that week entirely to my advantage and am now totally prepared.  Or not.  We’ve had kind of a rough week around here (is that a theme or what?), and I’m still as yet, totally UNprepared.

I have a day and a half though, so I’m hopeful I can pull something together for my husband by Sunday morning.  (Did you know if you google “Last Minute Father’s Day gifts” you’ll get over a million and a half links?)

With that in mind, here are some Fun Friday Links to help me (and hopefully others of you who are just like me) honor my husband, who just happens to be an amazing dad!

Like I mentioned above, there are over 1.5 million responses if you do a search in google, so I’m going to leave you with the list above and go see what the kids and I can get done today!

Thursday Thoughts about Father’s Day

The idea of Father’s Day was thought up by Sonora Dodd of Spokane, Wash., while she listened to a Mother’s Day sermon in 1909. Dodd wanted a special day to honor her father, William Smart, a widowed Civil War veteran who was left to raise his six children on a farm. A day in June was chosen for the first Father’s Day celebration — 100 years ago, June 19, 1910, proclaimed by Spokane’s mayor because it was the month of Smart’s birth.

Fun Facts About Fathers

There are 67.8 million fathers in America.

There are 25.8 million raising three or more children younger than 18

There were 1.7 million single fathers in 2009.

On average, Americans spend $91 on gifts for dad’s big day, according a survey the National Retail Federation released in June 2009. Overall, Father’s Day gifts will cost $9.4 billion. By category, we expect to spend:

  • $1.9 billion on an outing such as dinner or a sports event
  • $1.3 billion on clothing
  • $1.2 billion on gift cards
  • $1 billion on electronics
  • $548 million on books or CDs
  • $522 million on home improvement items
  • $502 million on sporting goods.

Here are some photos sent in by readers to honor their dads! Keep them coming! We have a few more days!

This is a picture of my dear, sweet Daddy just a couple of months before he died.  He was our rock!  I miss him soooo much! Pam

This is a picture of my dear, sweet Daddy just a couple of months before he died. He was our rock! I miss him soooo much! Pam

R F Bell BellviewMary A writes:

A photo of Robert F. Bell on the porch at Bellview Church of Christ includes 3 of the things he loved; his Bible, a cigarette, and his leather hat.  The well-worn Bible was he mainstay, and he seriously tried to follow it to the best of his knowledge and lead his family to do the same.  The cigarette was a pleasure to him that was not, in those days, a guilty one–he was blissfully unaware of the harm it might cause him or those around him.  The leather hat was the little “pride” thing that he loved to wear when he ‘dressed up’.  We would brag on how nice he looked and tongue-in-cheek he would say, “I can’t help it”…..  A wonderfully fun, admirable, smart, strong, good, lovable man.

FYI- Mary A’s father happens to be my grandfather. He died just a few weeks before my wedding. He was an awesome man!

This a picture of the late Herman Jessee and his niece and nephew. Daddy love going to church on Sunday to hear God's words and sing. He knew after church his house would be full of laugher with his grandchildren and great children. Before daddy's mind got bad , he would love to play checkers with them. Daddy passaway on Spet. 25, 2008 at the Metcalfe Health Care in Edmonton. He has been gone for 2 years now and I miss him more then ever. I know you are in a better place. I will see you when Jesus calls me home. I love you, your daughter Connie

This a picture of the late Herman Jessee and his niece and nephew. Daddy love going to church on Sunday to hear God's words and sing. He knew after church his house would be full of laugher with his grandchildren and great children. Before daddy's mind got bad , he would love to play checkers with them. Daddy passaway on Spet. 25, 2008 at the Metcalfe Health Care in Edmonton. He has been gone for 2 years now and I miss him more then ever. I know you are in a better place. I will see you when Jesus calls me home. I love you, your daughter Connie

Daddy Chris and his cute kids!

Daddy Chris and his cute kids!

Happy Father's Day and Granddad Day to Gary from  your daughter's Kelly Jo and Susan!

Happy Father's Day and Granddad Day to Gary from your daughter's Kelly Jo and Susan!

Happy Father's Day to Granddad Rollin and Dad Eddie from Chris, Kelly Jo and kids

Happy Father's Day to Granddad Rollin and Dad Eddie from Chris, Kelly Jo and kids

More tomorrow!

Wordless Wednesday in honor of Fathers

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This post is joined up with Wordless Wednesday over at 5MinutesforMom.com

And today… you can leave your OWN link and thumbnail here at NanaHood too.  Just join in with the Linky Tools below: