Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Turning 21!

Within the next 6 months, I have a niece and a nephew turning the age of twenty-one!  It is a milestone in their life and it symbolizes the transition into adulthood.  With twenty-one comes personal growth, new responsibilities and legal rights.  

One is graduating from college at the end of the year and the other is working full-time at a restaurant.  They both have separate goals and thoughts of life.

When I was twenty-one, I had been married all most three years and I was teaching pres-school, three year olds.  This was my first job..  I was growing up fast.

Six months ago, I turned seventy.  I am fifty years older than them.   I have seen and done a lot during that time.

I want to give them some profound direction and words of wisdom.  But I have none.

I want the best for them.

I do know you have to live your life to the fullest.  They have a lot of life before them.

So as I think about turning twenty-one, I want to remind them:

1.  Have fun and make good choicess.

2.  Don't lose your values and your character.  These are so important to who you are.

3.  Be kind to others and especially yourself.  Encourage others.

4.  If you need help, ask for it.  There is nothing wrong in needing assistance.

5.  Work hard and focus on your school and/or your job.  

6.  Eat healthy and exercise.  As you get older, you will be glad you did!

7.  Follow your dreams.  Embrace all the opportunities and challenges that will come with working and going to school.

8.  What fuels your passion?  This is who you are.  God made you for a reason.  Your DNA is not like anyone else.

9.  Travel - traveling helps you to learn about people, new cultures, perspectives and learn about yourself.

10. Don't allow the words, "no"; "I can't do it"; or "it is impossible" to stop you.  It is your attitude and how you will take life by the horns and solve the problem(s).  You may fall, but you may also soar.  The choice is yours.  Remember Nike's slogan "Just Do It!"

11. Your job provides for you financially, but it does not define who you are.  Do something you enjoy and you feel God has placed you there.  If you do what you enjoy, you will be a success.

12. Speaking of success.  Success is to be found in the way in which we live out our lives day in and day out.  It is to be found as we pursue what God calls you to be and to do.  Success is not the end of a process.  It is how we undertake the process called life.

13. God knows your plans.  Allow Him to direct you!

I am excited to see how you live your life.  

The choice is yours.

You can make a difference!




Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Is Life Fair?

There are days when I feel life isn't fair.  Especially when I have been disappointed, I have loss a loved one and when I am doubting life overall.

We have all been there.  Right now I am in a good place.  It is so much easier to look at my surroundings when I don't feel the doom and gloom.  My emotional energy feels balanced.

I am searching for those words that I will need when everything is turned upside down.  When one is in that place, you can not see the future due to your surroundings.  It is your time to question, to doubt and to wonder "why"?

How can one rejoice when you have lost a loved one, you were let go from your job, you just lost your home or where will you get the money to pay a bill?

As a Christian, I know there is HOPE.  You ask, hope for what?  Will HOPE bring back someone I loved; bring back the home that I lost in a fire, etc.

H = He

O = Offers

P = Promises

E = Everyday

As a believer, the HOPE is Jesus Christ.  He suffered for us and died on the cross for all of all of our sufferings and failures so we could have eternal life.  That is what keeps me going when I feel lost.

As I suffer, I reflect on the scripture from Job 36:15 - "But God teaches men through suffering and uses distress to open their eyes."  What will my eyes be opened to?  Will I look at surroundings differently?  Will I understand?  Hopefully, I will see Jesus and what He wants me to learn or what He wants me to share with others.

"Why me?" - II Corinthians 1:3-4, "Let us give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the merciful Father, the God from whom all help comes.  He helps us in in all our troubles, so that we are able to help others who have all kinds of troubles, using the same help that we ourselves have received from God."  The more we suffer, the more Christ wants to comfort us.  Allow Him to be a part of your challenging times.  Comfort means He will give you strength to walk through the valley.  He will lead you through the dark time.  There will be friends and family who will encourage.  Just keep your eyes on Him!

How do I offer HOPE to someone who is dieing?

Death is hard to understand.  How do you offer hope?  Be there for them.  Walk beside them.  It is showing them you love them.   No one knows what the day will bring them.  Tomorrow is not promised to any one.  As a Christian, eternity life is promised to everyone.  Offer calmness and confidence instead of fear and uncertainity.  Love them!

I seem to have expectactions on how life should go instead of seeing life the way it is.  Life is tough and it can be cruel.  But there can be happiness and joy.   Take one day at a time and enjoy the moment with loved ones.  Treasure each day.  Life is a gift that one can not take for granted.  

How will I look at my circumstances?  Is God trying to set me up for failure and unhappiness or does He have a plan?  He is the one in control.  There is HOPE!  Keep your eyes on Him!



Friday, March 1, 2024

Tribute to My Aunt Virginia

 Everyone has a relative(sibling, aunt/uncle, cousin...) who was special to them.  

I have had several in my life.  Three of them will always have a special place in my heart.  One was my Aunt Nunner(my mom's older sister) who passed away in 2002, then there was my Uncle Alfred(my mom's Uncle) who passed away in 2007 and then there is my Aunt Virginia, who passed away, January 29, 2024 at the age of 96.

She was special to me in that she was married to my biological dad's(Buzzy) brother(Sonny) and she was the sister of my step-father(Harry).  This all sounds pretty crazy, but actually it is a sweet story.  My parent's, Buzzy and Joyce, divorced when I was 4 and my sister, Terri, was ten months old.

Thanksgiving of 1958, Aunt Virginia's brother, Harry, was going through a divorce and my mother was divorced.  Aunt Virginia did not want her brother or sister-in-law to spend Thanksgiving alone.  Virginia invited them both to the house.  She always said, "When I invited Harry and Joyce to my home, I just thought they could be friends.  I never expected them to get married."  Three months after my mom and Harry met each other, they went to the Court House and said their vows.  The next day, my mom and step-father and Terri and I moved to Waco.

My Aunt Virginia enjoyed her life living in Dallas from the day she was born on September 19, 1927, until her death on January 29, 2024.

At the burial gravesite, the pastor talked about Virginia and her life.  He talked about her 96 years of life and all she had achieved.  The one phrase that struck home with me was "Virginia was born before the Empire State Building was built."

I had never looked at her life and thought of all the new inventions, creations, products, etc. that happened during her lifespan.  The world has changed in 96 years.  For fun, I googled  "Inventions that have changed the world".  

It is amazing all the items I take for granted and feel as if they have been around for ever.  A few items.  Sunglasses were introduced in 1929 by Sam Foster.  In October 1945, America's first ballpoint pen, went on sale at Gimbel's for $12.50.  Polaroid camera, went on sale for the first time in 1948.  The demonstration of modern television in 1939 at the New York World's Fair.  Self-winding mechanical watch - Rolex improved the idea in 1931.  The helicopter made a series of successful flight tests between 1939-1941.  All of these items changed the world.  I wondered what she thought about all of these new discoveries.

The past thirty years, Virginia experienced computers, internet, cell phones and so much more.  

On July 20th, 1969, Virginia was glued to the television, just like so many other people around the world.  Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon and said, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."  I wish now I would have asked her what she was thinking at the moment she saw a man walk on the moon.

A lot of history has happened during her lifetime.  Many changes.  Some to make her life easier and some harder.

As you can tell from her photo, she was beautiful and had a very strong personality.   

Virginia's younger years were during The Great Depression(1929-1939).  She didn't say much about the depression, except her father worked hard to provide for her, her mother and her brother.  

When she graduated from high school, her class was one of the first graduating classes at Sunset High School.  A few days after graduation, Virginia and her girlfriend took the streetcar to downtown Dallas to apply for a job at the bank.  She enjoyed working at the bank for thirty-five years.  She always had interesting stories of the various customers who would come to her window to make a bank transaction. 

Virginia was married to Sonny for twenty-nine years before he died of a heart attack on June 5, 1976.  She loved Sonny.  They had shared so much together; elementary, junior high and high school, WWII, losing their 9 month old baby daughter, Linda Susan, in 1955, the death of her father and death of Sonny's father and so much more.

At the funeral, she showed very little emotions, as she knew life continued on and she had a twelve year old son, Michael Dale, who was now her total responsibility.  Her oldest son, Tink, was twenty-six and had his own life.  

For the next years, Virginia continued to work and provide for Michael Dale, as well as taking care of her mother, Eunice.  

Retiring in her early 50's, she began to travel with friends and family and seeing America.  She always spoke of fond memories of her travels.

The years ahead were not easy.  She persevered through heartache in losing her youngest, Michael Dale in Novemer 2006 and her oldest, Tink in December 2013.

Auntie was a wonderful daughter, sister, wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, aunt, cousin and friend.

Women of today talk about how women in the 1900's were puppets and were weak.

When I look at Aunt Virginia, I see a woman who faced the obtstacles in her life; she was confident; caring; comfortable in speaking her mind; didn't seek approval of others and was very strong and determined.

As you reflect on your loved ones, look at their journey and how they handled those barriers.

Because of Aunt Virginia's heartaches, she was able to comfort others.

There is a verse in 2 Corinthians 1:3 - "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God."

As I grieve, may I remember all Aunt Virginia mourned throughout her life.  The Lord comforted her and gave her the wisdom and direction she needed to face each day.

Rest In Peace, Auntie!

I Love You!


Virginia

Virginia, Myrt(her mother), Tinky(son), Michael Dale(son)  & Sonny(husband)