Showing posts with label Single Mothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Single Mothers. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2017

THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF THANKFULNESS


Andy Williams' Special - Common Use - Educational Purposes Only


When I was a little girl I was surrounded by very successful family members. My aunts were schoolteachers. One even became a college professor. She constantly exhorted me to go to college but never offered any help to do so.

Both my grandfathers ran successful businesses most of their lives. Uncles on both sides were ministers - ranging from staid and straight Lutheran style to the more edgy Pentecostal brand.


  Common Use - Educational Purposes Only - No Infringement Intended - Click link to YouTube

One great uncle was a professional football player, later working as a direct assistant to Vince Lombardi for decades, the legendary coach of the Green Bay Packers.

Another uncle had his own microchip company, before the market fell. Yet another owned a motorcycle dealership, where he also sold amphibious vehicles. Some of my cousins were teachers. Another aunt worked as a doctor on an Indian reservation.

My sister has worked for a huge pharmaceutical firm for years. My brother has an enviable position with yet another medical company. My mother worked for the state government. My father though an artist, worked for the Boilermakers' Union, before his passing.

My entire family is well-travelled, having gone to the ends of the earth, it seems. Some of them even lived as international missionaries for years, until politics drove them back to ministry in the United States.

There were also many veterans in my family - giving us all a patriotic and historical perspective.

Both Mom and Dad's families emphasized the importance of education and success.

Dad used to always promise me, "Study hard, and I'll send you to college." But they turned out to be empty words.

My plan was to go to either Columbia or Oral Roberts University to get a double major in Journalism and Psychology. I also dreamed of going to the Sorbonne, since I had taken several years of French.


       Sorbonne University Paris, France     Informational use Only


But it was not to be. I was accepted at Columbia, Temple, and Edinburgh Universities, but my parents suddenly divorced, which put an end to my aspirations. Even with a teacher's promised help to get a scholarship, the money equation didn't work out.

My rebellion against the Lord for a few short years took its toll, as I struggled against loss of home, loss of family, lack of food, poverty, and the disappearance of all that I held dear.

My parents remarried and started new lives, new children, new homes, and rarely gave me a second's thought. There were no cellphones nor internet back in the late 1970's, with which to stay in touch.

After being driven by circumstances to repentance, and back into the Lord's Arms, I eventually ended up going to a two-year Bible college.  I lived on five dollars worth of vegetables a week, from a farmer's co-op. In my few spare hours I held down a part-time job at K-mart.

Eventually, the overwhelmingly restrictive rules, the Spartan living quarters, (four bunks to one small bedroom), being bound to campus during non-working hours, and not being able to pay for my tuition - drove me into a low-paying career as a travel agent.

I was strictly on my own, and forced to survive on my own resources, of which there were few. I didn't even own a car for many, many years.

From there my life took a nosedive downward, and has recovered only periodically for the rest of the duration.

More than once, if not for the Lord, I found myself in situations that could easily have cost my life.

I ended up raising a child on my own, working several jobs at a time to do so. Putting a roof over his head, providing food, clothing and entertainment, was never easy. Sometimes I had to rely on friends to babysit while I worked at low-paying jobs, struggling to pay rent, without the benefit of child support.

I can't honestly say that my faith never wavered. At times it did. I can't say that I was always thankful. At one point before my divorce from an abusive husband, the only thing we could afford from the grocery store was toilet paper, not even food. To this day I remember how it felt, walking into that grocery store, surrounded by walls and shelves of food, but unable to purchase anything to eat.

For several years after my son left home - much to my chagrin - I was finally able to afford more comfortable dwelling places, but never quite able to buy a home of my own.

I took real estate classes, and got several real estate licenses. Fortunately I finally managed to reach a bare bones level of success, relative to all I had experienced in my young adult years.

Intermittent illnesses would unfortunately intervene and eat up any spare income.

After several years of working sixteen hour days, 24/7 on call night and day, the economy crashed. Jobs were like precious jewels, rarely to be found, even for those with bachelor and master's degrees. Many former advanced professionals worked at McDonalds and Taco Bell. 

Homeless people filled the streets. Waiters and waitresses were former Wall Street traders and bonds market brokers.

I went back to a short-term school to redefine myself. From analyzing security vs air conditioning building issues on tall structures, I fell to the depths of cleaning feces and blood off of floors, after changing adult diapers on invalids.

The contrast was great. I missed the technical problem solving as I turned my mind to carefully placing pillows under the body of  stroke victims, or working with them on their water-borne physical therapy exercises. This I did for ten hours a day, six days a week, no holidays or overtime pay.


      Common Use - Educational Purposes Only - No Copyright Infringement Intended

The work was just as hard or harder than climbing iron ladders and lifting myself up to building rooftops, to examine and program air conditioning units. Holding up the body of a male adult  for nursing purposes, is no small task. But the pay was less than half as much as I had been making.

Yet I was FINALLY THANKFUL. I was working again!

No more long waits in lines at churches for a few bags of dried beans and spaghetti. No more wandering from office building parking lot to the next, handing out literally hundreds of resumes. No more waiting in line for stale bread and cakes at food handouts.

I was working so many hours for so little pay I was finally able to save up enough to move to another state where unemployment was lower. It was also exciting to think that I would be close to my son again, since he had moved to the state after his stint in the Marines.

So I finally have a steady job. I am thankful. And I'm helping other people. That is satisfying. But I barely make enough to cover rent and bills. And I am not doing what I had hoped to do in life.

My son is angry because I spent so much time working to put a roof over his head. He blames me because he didn't have more than a couple pair of shoes to wear each year while going to school. He didn't have designer clothes or jeans, or a skateboard. He didn't get to do all the things all the other kids were doing. But he was LOVED. For that he is NOT GRATEFUL.

Although I manage to write in my spare time, I'm not able to churn out all the books I have in mind.

But I AM GRATEFUL for the turkey I received as I went to work yesterday, on Thanksgiving, to "minister" to others more lonely, and more ill than myself.

And though I heard nothing from my family at large, who I am absolutely sure were scarfing down huge amounts of turkey, dressing, and sweet potatoes... I am grateful.

I get to have a long weekend off. My own free turkey is in the oven right now roasting. I can smell the browning scent as it wafts into the living room.

I have two hands to write with. Two eyes to see with. Two legs to stand on. I still have my teeth. I can eat regular food and don't have to have my food ground up like baby-food.

My electric works to cook the turkey in the oven, and powers the heat which staves off the cold outside. I have running water, (though not good to drink). I can still buy bottled water. I even have instant mashed potatoes, instant stuffing, and cranberry sauce.

And YES. I AM TIRED. But I have paper and pen, and a computer to write. Access to the internet, and a way to broadcast my message... Even though my ministry doesn't even support the cost to have a ministry website.

www.lightpointministries.com    CLICK FOR LINK

I still have my God, Jesus Christ. The one and Only True and Living God. Heaven forbid that I be like the other nine lepers who didn't realize from where their healing came. They didn't take time to return and give Him thanks.  (Luke 17:12 ).

No matter how little we have, or how impossible it seems - if we are still breathing we can STILL MANAGE to FIND SOMETHING TO THANK GOD FOR.



 Don Moen - Give Thanks - No Copyright infringement Intended - Educational Purposes Only

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Sunday, January 8, 2017

ORPHANS AND O-R-P-H-A-N-S

          
"When my father and mother forsake me, the Lord will take me up." Ps. 27:10

I woke up this morning on the verge of tears. I am not an orphan. My mother is still alive. I still have remaining family members in different parts of the nation, whom I very seldom see.

There are of course "technical" orphans. They are born helpless and defenseless with no one who loves them to take care of them. Their parents may have died, or they may have been given up by their mothers. Even worse, many are made orphans by the ravages of war, in countries where families cannot live in peace, and many die leaving starving children behind. My heart goes out to them.

I am sure that not knowing who you really are or where you came from can be a lonely existence even if you have loving adoptive parents to care for you. Really you are very lucky that someone plucked you out of the crowd and wanted you all for their very own.

Yet...I feel very much like an orphan. Alone and forgotten.

I work with the elderly on a daily basis. I try to make their lives brighter and full of joy. So many of them are completely forgotten by their families. No one comes to visit them. Perhaps some families are too poor to make the trip. Others though, I know, have been written off by their children. Some have successful children who could afford to come make the trip, but they don't have the time to invest in their long-forgotten parent, as they live their busy daily lives.

Then I come home after a long day to my dark apartment, without a dog or cat to greet me. No husband. No warm hearth. No warm embrace.

Yes. I have the Spirit of God with me. But sometimes a person needs real human comfort: a hug, a smile, a kiss on the cheek.

When you tried as hard as possible to raise your child or children to want to know and serve the Living God, and they insist on going their own, selfish ways...there can be no real understanding. Sometimes not even real communication.

A mother may go out of her way to reconnect with long lost family members. She may move thousands of miles away from friends and established business connections to be near her children and grandchildren.

But if the grown child doesn't appreciate all that its mother has done, raising them on her own, without the benefit of child support - then what more can a mother do?

When screamed and shouted at, belittled and having abuse heaped on her, should the mother keep setting herself up for more hurt?

If a child had to live with an abusive father, even though the child doesn't remember, the imprints of that devastation have been written upon his or her personality. The child may blame the mother instead of the father for the male parent's abuse.

Even with psychological counselling, treatment for PTSD, without the treatment of the spiritual aspect of this blight, no lasting remedy can be achieved. Only a personality healed and changed by the power of Jesus Christ can overcome this hardship which happens to so many people in our society.

The resulting children, especially males, seem compelled to repeat the vicious cycle of abuse. Sometimes they unconsciously adopt the absent, abusive father's attitude toward women and children:  to be "seen and not heard", to "speak only when spoken to", etc.

So even adults can be orphans. Orphans don't have to be technically "orphans" to be isolated and alone in this world.

To top it all, we are living in the "last days". The Bible says:

"And because iniquity shall abound the love of many shall wax cold" Matthew 24:12
It also says:  "And a man's foes shall be those of his own household." Matthew 10:36


And yes. It is important that the Church at large help the widows, divorcees (who are often widows not by their own choosing), and the true orphans.

        "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the father is this, to visit the fatherless and the widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unspoiled from the world." James 1:27
Yet, the Church needs to be cognizant of Christians and others who have been jettisoned out of their families by prior family break-ups. Sometimes people are relegated to memory only, by rebellious and toxic children, and sometimes by other uncaring family members.

One thing about the deep, prophetic, spiritual walk is that most people will misunderstand you. If you are engaged in the prophetic, seer realm, you own family may reject you. Often your actions may be interpreted by "mental illness", or some other such title they try to attribute to your uniqueness. This family isolation certainly sets one up for mishaps and traps of the enemy, due to lack of family support.

For that reason it is important to make strong connections with a church of your persuasion.

There is also a large segment of dedicated, Christian women who have no spouses, let-alone Christian husbands. The ratio of men to women in our society is very uneven. Far more women are looking for male partners than vice versa. As one ages the statistical probability of finding a match goes down even further.

According to Infoplease.com in 2014 the ration of males to females was two to one.

                  www.infoplease.com/spot/womencensus7.html

To find a mate is a miracle! Many married couples go through life not even realizing it was God that enabled them to find each other and fall in love. To have a warm, close-knit family is one of the greatest blessings God can bestow on anyone. Cherish your family.

Cherish your mother. She deserves it. You will never know how many nights she stayed up walking the floor, holding you in your arms as you cried until dawn. You'll never know the endless multitude of stinky diapers and vomit spills she cleaned up. You have no idea of the opportunities she missed or the abuse she endured for you. EVEN A MOTHER CAN BE AN ORPHAN.

But this mother is going to "DECREE" the Word of the Lord and expect Him to fulfill it as she sends it forth out into the heavenly realm. Because God's Word goes out and does not return empty. It accomplishes fantastic feats in the spiritual realm. (Isaiah 55:11)

"... but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord" (Joshua 24:15)
AND "Her children arise up and, and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praiseth her." Proverbs 31:28 

  God's blessings to you and your family in this new year of 2017! May all the orphans find families!

                   "Give Me Jesus" Fernando Ortega - Ruth Graham Tribute