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How the Bible Can Help You Find Your Positive Inner Voice

In the biblical book of 1 Kings, the prophet Elijah is frantic in the wake of violence and threats he’s helplessly witnessed. He flees in fear for his life, into the wilderness, where only by the instruction of angels is he able to eat and drink enough to cling to life.

Eventually, God calls out to Elijah, making God’s presence known through a dramatic series of events—a “great and mighty wind” that splits mountains and shatters rocks, an earthquake, and a fire.

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The text tells us, “but the Lord was not in…” the wind, the earthquake or the fire. Instead, God’s voice came to Elijah after these natural wonders ceased. God’s voice came to Elijah, in various translations, as “a soft murmuring sound” or as “a still, small voice.”

This passage is an object lesson in how to connect with your positive inner voice, with the version of your true, authentic, and positive self that can guide you through each day, year, indeed through your whole life.

Just as Elijah knew God’s power caused the wildly dramatic wind, earthquake, and fire, we often witness the loud, brash, intimidating aspects of the world and our place in it.

But just as in Elijah’s moment in the wilderness, the loud things in our lives eventually quiet. And in that silence, we can listen more deeply, noticing with more intention what the soft murmurations, the still smallness of our inner voices have to say.

In the Bible story, God is present in both the loud and soft volumes. So, too, do the most powerful parts of yourself exist in powerful, assertive moments as well as quiet, contemplative ones.

Let’s celebrate that today, that juxtaposition of loud and quiet—and the opportunity each new day brings us to connect with our positive inner voice simply by knowing that after the fires and quakes of life, a soft stillness will always, eventually, call to us from deep inside.

How the Bible and ‘Abide’ Can Help You Sleep

We are a sleep-deprived nation. Up to half of all Americans report having times they find it difficult to do one of the most natural things on God’s green earth—sleep. We may be the only species to have ever suffered this deprivation. Does your cat have trouble sleeping? Your dog? Not mine. I’m looking at her now…and envying her. 

I suspect I’m among the sleep deprived. It’s my own fault, really. I always find one thing more I want to do before hitting the sack. Check out an article online, watch part of an old movie—just the opening, I promise myself. The next thing I know I’m waking up to the end credits, slumped over on the couch with the remote still clutched in my hand. 

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Or I answer just a few emails or post something on social media where I end up in digital quicksand. I love to read in bed, but a good book is as likely to keep me up as put me to sleep. And then there are those nights my mind gallops through all the “what-ifs” my brain can randomly generate. 

In researching the book I’m writing for Guideposts on Alzheimer’s and my family, I’ve read about the importance of proper sleep and long-term brain health. The neurologist I’m seeing in addition to scheduling an MRI, blood tests and cognitive evaluation, sent me to a sleep clinic. The link between poor sleep habits and cognitive decline is fairly well-established. That scares me. 

So, if you’re struggling like me, help is on the way. Let me tell you about Abide, a Christian meditation app. Among the things this app can do is put you to sleep. Really. The app will give you Biblically-based sleep stories, devotions and guided meditations all backed by soothing, relaxing music sure to help you drift off naturally and peacefully. As it says in Proverbs, “…when you lie down, your sleep will be sweet.”

The Abide app does more than just put you to bed. It offers Biblically-based meditations on conquering stress, embracing happiness, facing challenges, finding your purpose and much more. Check out their YouTube channel to find out more ways Abide can help you grow and improve your spiritual well-being and relationship with God. 

Full disclosure: Guideposts liked Abide so much and was so inspired by their mission to promote Christian-based meditation and mindfulness that we have brought them into the Guideposts family. Abide—I love the name—is now part of Guideposts and this is good news for you, and for me. Now I’ll be sleeping better.

How Technology Helped a Lonely Widow Reconnect

Diane: Hi Guideposts! I’m Diane Stark, this is my mother-in-law, Judy. We’re gonna talk about a story I wrote for Guideposts about how Judy learned to use technology to communicate with family members that live far away.

I noticed Judy becoming withdrawn after her husband, Larry, died in June of 2016. He needed a lot of care before he passed, and so she always had one of her children or one of her in-law children with her to help her care for him.

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After he passed, we all kinda went back to our old lives and our jobs and everything, and she was a widow and kind of alone. And I noticed that she just was really struggling with remaining close to the family. We’d all pulled together for so long, and then everybody kind of went their own ways after he passed. And so we just really tried hard to look for ways to include her in everything that we were doing, and technology played an important role in that.

Judy: Some of my favorite apps on my phone are Pinterest, WhatsApp. I use online banking, and I like WeatherBug. WhatsApp has helped me keep communicating with my youngest daughter, who lives in Amsterdam. And the other, just the plain texting, I use for my other daughter, who lives in Texas.

There are still times I prefer talking, because I sometimes get lonely and I’d like to talk with my sons and daughters and daughter-in-laws, and my friends. A lot of my friends.

When my daughter, she usually sends me pictures of her dog, and she sent one cute one, when she put boots on him, so I really had a laugh about that. [chuckles]

Diane: That was very cute.

Judy: It was too cute.

How Susan Burton Is Helping Women Rebuild After Prison

Susan Burton knows how difficult it is to start over.

Everyday Greatness--Celebrating the Heroes Among UsThe author of a new memoir, Becoming Mrs. Burton, and founder of A New Way of Life Re-Entry Project, a nonprofit that helps people rebuild their lives after incarceration, has spent more than twenty years trying to earn her clean slate. Burton grew up in a rough neighborhood in South Los Angeles. Her home life was dysfunctional and often violent. She was sexually abused as a child and was a survivor of rape by the time she hit her teen years. But it was the tragic death of her five-year-old son, K.K., in 1982 that finally broke Burton’s spirit. He was playing in the street when an off-duty police officer struck and killed him with his car.

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“I wasn’t able to manage the pain anymore,” Burton tells Guideposts.org.

She began to drink heavily and soon turned to drugs to numb her grief.

Burton spent the next two decades cycling in and out of prison for nonviolent crime and drug possession. Each time she was released, she told herself she’d get her life back on track. Each time, the pain of her loss and the trauma of her early years brought her back to drugs – crack, cocaine, and alcohol.

The cycle was exhausting, but it felt unbreakable to Burton who found only punishment instead of the promised rehabilitation of prison life.

“There was no rehabilitation at all happening inside of prison,” Burton says. “Basically, you would go in, you would be stripped of all your dignity, all of your dreams and all of your hopes and your humanity. Then you’re released one day. You come out and you try to make a life for yourself, but there are so many barriers and you are totally unprepared. It’s like holding onto this rope and you see the rope unraveling and you just fall back again into the same things that brought you there in the beginning.”

Burton remembers one release clearly, for all the wrong reasons. It wouldn’t be the last time she went to prison, but it felt like a wake-up call all the same.

“The officer said, ‘We have a bed waiting for you,’” Burton recalls. “And I’m all like, ‘No I’m not coming back, I’m going to get a job.’ He says to me, ‘The only job you’ll be able to get is a job inside of a prison.’”

It wasn’t until a friend behind bars directed her to a treatment center in an affluent Santa Monica neighborhood and got her a job as a live-in caregiver that Burton began to confront the buried trauma fueling her relationship with drugs and her trips to prison.

“I didn’t know anything about treatment,” Burton says. “I didn’t understand that I suffered from a disease and there was a solution to it. [In treatment] I built a personal relationship with God. I began to heal and process some of the misfortune of my earlier days, the loss of my son. And I became stronger. I went through a process of forgiveness and letting go. And I began to question why programs and processes that I found in Santa Monica were not available to women in South L.A.”

Treatment was a blessing to Burton, but it also opened her eyes to the racial injustice that permeated the California legal system.

According to the New York Times, decades of research has shown that criminal courts sentence black defendants more harshly than whites for the same offenses. In her Santa Monica treatment center, Burton saw that predominately white, wealthy drug offenders were sentenced to court-appointed drug treatment centers or were punished with community service for their crimes, whereas she was continuously sent to prison for minor drug offenses.

“I can remember being in a meeting and a man standing up saying he hated the color green because he had an accident under the influence and had been sent to court and in court, his sentence was to paint the jail, and he painted the jail green,” Burton recalls. “And he hated the color green because he’s spent so much time painting that jail. I sat there and listened to him and I thought, ‘Hell, I had to live in the jail.’”

After she finished treatment and saved up enough money from her job as a live-in caregiver, Burton decided to do something brave and extraordinary.

Most people choose to rebuild their lives far away from the places and people that hurt them in their past. Burton decided to grow something beautiful from her misfortune, planting it right in the middle of her old neighborhood, where so much violence and tragedy had taken place. She bought a tiny bungalow in South L.A., filled it with bunk beds and other necessities, then made trips to a place called skid row where a Greyhound bus would drop off former female inmates after they had served their sentences.

Her goal was straightforward, but not simple: to convince as many women as she could to come live with her, drug and crime free, and to help them find the fresh start she was already working on.

“It was ten of us living in the house and we all just kind of pooled our money together to pay the bills and create a community of women helping women,” Burton says of the early years of her nonprofit. “We would share the resources and we were all just helping one another. It was magical.”

Her work eventually caught the attention of the California Wellness Foundation and an agency called Community Partners. Both groups helped Burton attend classes on creating and managing a nonprofit. They also aided her in applying for a 501(c)(3) and donated $50,000 dollars in fellowship money to her cause. As a nonprofit, Burton was able to raise even more funds from angel investors and silent donors to open five more houses, eventually helping over a thousand women find a better life after prison.

A New Way of Life Re-Entry Program offers everything from legal services, employment opportunities, and case management to organizing the community to help change harmful policies that affect former inmates.

“The first step is to get her there and introduce her to the other women and usually she has a few friends in the house that will comfort her and help her feel welcome,” Burton says of the process every woman goes through at one of her homes. “Then we get her medical care and any types of public benefits that she’s entitled to: a driver’s license, birth certificate, social security cards. All those things take about a month to get into place. And then we begin to support her in going back to school, finding work or getting back into touch with her children. It’s just different for everybody.”

Burton knows we have a long way to go before our justice system corrects itself. It’s why she’s running her nonprofit, helping women who’ve fallen through the legal cracks. It’s also why she’s sharing her own journey in her intimate memoir, Becoming Mrs. Burton.

The book, which details Burton’s abuse as a child, rape, violence and her dehumanizing stints behind bars, is slowly making its way into prisons across the U.S. per Burton’s wishes. Over 11,000 copies have been sent to facilities across the country and through her website. People who know someone behind bars that could benefit from reading Burton’s story can order a book for them, free of charge.

“I see women who are so hungry for something better for their lives,” Burton says. “My hope is that women will read the book and be inspired to fight for the best that they can be. There is life and success after incarceration, but you must work for it.”

To send a free copy of Susan Burton’s book, Becoming Mrs. Burton, to an inmate, visit becomingmrsburton.com.

How Singer Michelle Williams Copes with Depression and Finds Joy

“I need help.” The three most powerful words a person can say. I should know. It took me a long time, but I finally said them. It most likely saved my life.

I guess it started when I was about 13. Today I understand I was having symptoms. Back then they were just feelings that left me unsettled: a passing sense that nothing mattered or would ever really matter, anxiety that made me climb out of bed in the middle of the night and pace the floor for no reason, a kind of spiritual numbness, feelings of not being loved even though I was.

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I soon learned that these were signs of depression. In a way, I thought I simply had to live with them. Even years later, when I was performing in Destiny’s Child, those feelings would rear up. I’d be like, “Oh, depression. You still here? I gotta go do a show. We’ll talk later.” I tried to ignore what was happening. Or maybe I was just trying to accept it.

Michelle Williams on the cover of the June-July 2021 Guideposts
        As seen in the June-July 2021
        issue of
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Three years ago, I plunged into such a dark hole that I couldn’t get out. I could barely get off my sofa. Things came to a head when I didn’t show up for a promised event with my pastor and his wife. Didn’t call or text. Just didn’t show up.

“This isn’t like you, Michelle,” they said. It was then that I finally allowed myself to say those three powerful words. I need help. I called the therapist I’d been seeing—that much I had been doing—and she recommended a facility to go to. Arrangements got made. I drove myself there. Didn’t pack a bag, a toothbrush, a change of clothes. My hair was sticking up like a bad Halloween wig. I just drove.

More than 16 million American adults a year develop a major depressive disorder the way I had. Generalized anxiety disorder affects nearly 7 million. Less than half seek or get treatment. Less than half. Christians can be especially prone to this, as if we don’t want to let down the Great Physician or think that depression is a failure of faith. I ask you, though, would we do the same if we had cancer or some other disease?

Depression is a disease like any other. It doesn’t care who you are or what your external life looks like. It gets inside you. I had a good career. My music grew out of my Christian faith. Things seemed to be going well for me, at least from the outside. But inside I was a mess. The act of checking into that treatment center was the first step of taking back the power. Here’s what I learned.

Accept the help. It’s not enough to ask for help. You have to be willing to accept it. “What do you have to be depressed about?” I’d scold myself. “You’re doing well. People would love to have your career.” The externals don’t matter. Only when my pastor reached out did I give in.

Depression tells you that you don’t deserve to feel better. That your feelings are the truth. It felt as if I had been dogpaddling in the middle of the ocean. At the facility, I was finally on shore, able to catch my breath.

This nice nurse found out that I hadn’t brought any clothes with me and went to Target, loading me up. I was so grateful, I couldn’t believe it. Depression smothers gratitude. But that spark of gratitude was the beginning of acceptance and healing.

Own your truth. Don’t just talk about—or around—what you’re going through; you have to own it. I had been transparent about my battle with depression, occasionally even opening up about it to interviewers. But there’s a big difference between transparency and acceptance. An alcoholic who admits to being one but still drinks isn’t really owning the disease.

The same is true with depression. By owning your depression, you allow yourself to be helped. By the people around you and by God. Especially by God—because you can’t fool him.

My first name is Tenitra—pronounced “Teh-nee-trah.” Michelle is my middle name. When I launched my career, they said, “Who do you think little girls want to be like? A Tenitra or a Michelle?” I went along with it—becoming Michelle in Destiny’s Child—while losing a part of myself. I just buried it and didn’t say anything. But it hurt.

Back in seventh or eighth grade, I’d discovered the power of my voice, feeling the presence of God smack-dab in the middle of a song we were singing at Macedonia Baptist Church in Rockford, Illinois, where I grew up. But I never saw myself as an entertainer. I don’t regret the career I’ve had, but for too long I left half of myself hidden.

Not long ago, I had the thrill of competing in The Masked Singer. Performing with a mask on, I was wild and free. I had labeled myself as used, tired and done. Michelle was over. Not Tenitra. I rediscovered the gift that God had given me. Not what others said. What I knew. The truth. It was freeing.

Feel your feelings, but don’t let them fool you. I was so ashamed of how I felt, and shame feeds depression the way oxygen feeds a fire. Some people are predisposed to depression. No need to judge it. Treat it like a disease.

I have a magnet that says, “Sometimes when I open my mouth, my mom comes out.” My mother is a bright woman. She could write you an eloquent 10-page letter in 10 minutes. But, baby, you do not want to be on the receiving end of Mrs. Williams’s anger.

Anger could pop out of me too, especially when I was hiding deeper emotions, such as my fears of rejection or of somehow not measuring up. Feelings are not facts. They can feel very real without being true. Like not feeling loved when you are loved. Or not feeling good enough when you are. Or going by some false label. Feel your feelings, but then confront them. Push back.

Don’t compare. It’s not just people in the music business who end up comparing themselves to others, checking record sales or social media followers. Open Instagram or Facebook and you’ll see people exactly as they want to be seen. But does the picture tell the whole story?

Ask yourself who you are measuring yourself to. My faith tells me to compare myself to the life Jesus led and try to live up to that. And know that he loves me despite my stumbles, even more so because of them.

The comparisons we make through social media can be especially harmful. It’s no wonder that so many kids, attached to their phones 24/7, are finding themselves struggling with anxiety and depression.

Cast your cares. My uncle used to take us fishing all the time. I didn’t like it much. It was often freezing, and my uncle used little hot dogs as bait that really smelled. You had to cast your line into the water, which was hard for me. I’ve always been lanky with long arms, and casting a fishing line is not something a lanky preteen girl is going to nail the first time around. Or the second. Or the third. In other words, it takes practice. I used to get frustrated.

But here’s something. The disciple and fisherman Peter uses the word cast when he talks about our cares and anxieties. “Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you,” he says in 1 Peter 5:7 (NIV). Other translations say, “Cast all your cares” or “Cast all your worries.”

The point is, we need to do it with God’s help. Doing it takes practice. And it can be frustrating because we are human and don’t always get it right. I sure don’t. But that’s okay. I’ve learned the most powerful antidote to depression is sharing it with the Lord, however imperfectly. Nothing will get you more depressed than trying to be perfect.

My whole life, I had a little list of what I thought a perfect daughter was, a perfect employee, a perfect Christian. If I crossed off everything, then I was okay. If I didn’t check all those boxes, then I was a bad person. Instead of casting my cares on God, I collected them. I ended up serving those lists, not God.

If we define a bag by its creator—like the Dooney & Bourke my aunt gave me back in the day—why don’t we define ourselves by the same standard? By who created us?

Today instead of checking in with my own lists, I check in with God’s. Instead of asking myself, “Who is mad at me? What have I done career-wise? Why am I not married?” I start by looking at God’s list and what he has done for me. I’ll even write it down. A blessings list. A door to joy. I mean, what’s more joyous than God’s love for us? Is there anything to be more grateful for?

This past year has been tough for us all. When I first heard about Covid-19, I was in Los Angeles for award-show season. The Emmys, the Grammys. I was in a much better place, gearing up for a huge tour that would launch at the end of May. All at once we were being asked to stay home. No tour. Nothing.

I’m used to living alone, but after a while I was like, Oh, no. I’m going to get depressed. What if I spiral down? Who will help me? Depression, after all, thrives in isolation. It loves getting you alone.

Back home in Atlanta, I’d go out for long walks, breathing in the fresh air. I’d listen to myself, checking in. “Are you avoiding any dark feelings? Own them. Are you really okay? Don’t fake it. What cares do you need to cast on the Lord today? Do it!”

Especially painful was losing my father this past December, a terrible loss at a time like this. Again and again, I calm myself by remembering, “God is with you. He is bigger than depression, and he loves you. Rejoice in that.”

You may not struggle with the level of depression I have, but almost everyone gets depressed from time to time. It’s part of being human. Don’t be afraid to reach out, to ask for help, even if it’s just from a friend. I need help are the most powerful words. They are the key to opening the door to joy.

 

Book cover for Michelle Williams' Checking ni

 

Michelle Williams is the author of Checking In: How Getting Real About Depression Saved My Life—and Can Save Yours.

 

 

 

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How She Overcame Adult Illiteracy and Changed Her Life

Executive secretary. Office manager. Paralegal. Medical records supervisor. Slowly I went through the job listings online, slumping more in my seat with each one. I would’ve been thrilled to land any of these jobs. I dreamed of working in an office, where I could dress up instead of wearing a uniform. Where I could be in a position of responsibility.

But that was never going to happen. Something was holding me back. The same thing that had held me back my whole life.

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Reading.

It had been a struggle for me as long as I could remember. I did okay with short, basic sentences. But more than that was beyond me. And spelling? What a nightmare! There were so many words I didn’t feel confident writing without looking up.

Take that word confident. Or was it confidant? I couldn’t rely on spell-check. Not with the number of words I didn’t know. For these office jobs, they wanted people who were fast. Accurate. Smart. Not me.

Best to stick with the kind of work I knew. I typed “cashier” in the search bar, each letter like a nail in the coffin where my dreams were buried. My previous job had been as a nursing assistant at a hospital. I’d liked working in a health-care setting, helping people. But a confrontation with a difficult patient had left me shaken up and I’d resigned, even though my boss urged me to stay. I was 45 and my life was going nowhere!

Other than my husband and kids, no one knew the difficulty I had reading, and even they didn’t know the extent of it. I’d developed all kinds of tactics to hide my problem, like pretending I’d forgotten my glasses and letting someone else decipher a form for me. But the shame and insecurity weighed on me.

I glared at the job listings on my computer. God, can’t you help me learn to read? I don’t want to be stuck like this! It was a familiar prayer, one I’d asked for years.

And one that had never been answered. Did God even care that I couldn’t read? It didn’t seem to matter to anyone when I was growing up, not even my teachers. Naturally, I tried to hide my problem. If a teacher called on me to read aloud, I’d act out to avoid the embarrassment of stumbling over the words.

Every year I was promoted to the next grade. I graduated high school with a 0.33 GPA. It felt as if everyone had given up on me learning to read. My classmates went on to college. I got married. Terry was eight years older than me, a career military man. Doting and protective, he made me feel loved. I didn’t tell Terry I had trouble reading. I didn’t want him thinking less of me.

We’d been married three years when Terry got stationed in Okinawa, Japan. I couldn’t read road signs or newspapers there, but neither could other military wives. We had two sons, Terrance and Neko, and a daughter, Shaleea. I read to them—Dr. Seuss and other children’s books. If I struggled with a word, they didn’t notice. And I wanted them to grow up loving books.

One day I left my grocery list out on the table. Terry walked by and picked it up. “This isn’t how you spell hamburger,” he said, puzzled. “Or spaghetti.”

There was no way to avoid the truth. “I don’t know how to spell a lot of words,” I said. “I’m just not very good at reading. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you.”

I couldn’t meet his eyes, but Terry wasn’t upset. He held me tight and said, “It’s no big deal. There’s a class you can take on the base.”

A program for Japanese wives of American servicemen to learn English. I could only imagine the looks I’d get. What would people think of me, born and raised in America but not knowing how to read English? “I can’t do that,” I said. “I’d be mortified.”

Terry didn’t push me. His next posting was in Germany. We mixed with sophisticated, educated people. I saw how they held themselves, paid close attention to the words they used in conversation. I didn’t want them thinking I was different. But I felt less than. When I looked in the mirror, all I saw was a failure.

After eight years overseas, we came home to Oklahoma. I needed a job. There was no way I’d get hired to work in an office, like some of the women I’d known in Germany. I found a job as a cashier. Nothing wrong with that. It was just that part of me wanted something more. But with every year that passed, that seemed even farther out of reach.

At my computer, I went to another job website. The kids were grown now, chasing their own dreams. Terry was retired, enjoying life. I was the only one who was trapped in dead-end jobs, the only one who was miserable.

It wasn’t as if I hadn’t tried to get help over the years. I’d gone to GED classes despite having a diploma, but they were geared toward passing a test and I couldn’t read the material. Another course was designed for single mothers, with parenting lessons I didn’t need. At a vocational rehab program, a psychiatrist tested me, chalked my problem up to anxiety and advised me to apply for disability benefits.

I want to work, to learn, I thought. I just don’t know what the answer is.

Almost unconsciously, I typed “learning to read” into Google. An ad popped up—for a place called the Community Literacy Center. It wasn’t a new program, but somehow I’d never heard of it. I went to the website. “Where every adult who wants to read has the opportunity to learn.” For the first time, I felt a flicker of hope.

I told Terry about it. “You should try it,” he said. “But no matter what, I’ll always love you.”

One evening a week later, I drove to the library for the introductory session. I sat in the car, afraid to go in. Was I really ready to let strangers know my secret?

I forced myself to open those library doors and walk inside. I took a seat in a meeting room. There were 10 of us, men and women who seemed almost as nervous as I was.

A tall blonde woman stood at the front of the room. “I’m Ms. Angela,” she said. “I’m happy to see y’all. Tonight we’re not going to do any studying. Just tell me a little about yourself and why you’re here.”

My chest tightened. The only thing scarier than reading was the idea of talking about my struggles. The secret I’d hidden all my life. I wasn’t the first to speak. It turned out that the others, like me, had been too embarrassed to admit they had a problem.

Finally, it was my turn. “I’m Lisa,” I said. “I don’t read so well. And I want to be able to spell better.” As the words tumbled out, the shame that had been weighing me down left me too.

I’d been angry at God, thinking he didn’t care about my struggles. But hadn’t he brought me Terry, who’d encouraged me from the moment I told him my secret? God wanted the best for me. He was just waiting for me to be ready to fully trust my problem to him. Now I was.

Lord, help me to read.

The class met again two days later. On a whiteboard, Ms. Angela wrote phonetic vowel and consonant sounds beside each letter of the alphabet, explaining how different sounds make words. She read them. We repeated. Something clicked…. I could see how it all worked together!

At the next session, we reviewed. Then Ms. Angela handed out worksheets and had us read a paragraph silently. There were a lot of words I couldn’t figure out. I started to panic. In an instant, Ms. Angela was beside me. “Remember the vowel sounds,” she said. “Some words have a short ‘o’ sound like off. Others have a long sound. You’re a smart woman, Lisa. You’ll get it.”

“I’m not smart,” I said. “I wish I was.”

“Lisa, I’ve been teaching 40 years. I know smart when I see it.”

No teacher had ever told me I was smart before. For the first time in my life, I thought, I can do this!

Two evenings a week, I went to class. Ms. Angela made all of us feel capable and valued. In six months, my reading level went from a fifth-grade to a ninth-grade level. I started reading books for fun. One class, I got stuck on a word in my book. I waved for Ms. Angela. She glanced at the cover. “Joyce Meyer,” she said. “One of my favorites. Let me know what you think.”

I couldn’t believe it. I was reading the same author as Ms. Angela! One day I got a call—my old boss at the hospital. “We have an opening, and I thought of you,” he said. “A receptionist for the mental health unit.”

I thought of everything that job would entail. Taking down patient information. Helping with paperwork. Reading charts. Filing. Entering prescription orders. A lot of responsibility. “I’m not sure…” I started to say. Then I thought of how Ms. Angela believed in me. How much Terry loved me. Wasn’t this the kind of job I’d prayed for? “I’ll apply right away,” I said.

I got the job. Terry and Ms. Angela were so proud.

On my first day, I told the woman who was training me that I struggled with reading and was taking a class to improve. I wasn’t ashamed anymore.

“You’ll do fine,” she said. “I’m glad you told me. I’ll help you any way I can.”

I took literacy classes for three years, and I look forward to more advanced reading and writing classes. One thing I know about smart people is, they never stop learning. Someday I hope to go to college.

In the meantime, I have a new job I love: I’m a claims examiner at a health clinic. There are still words that trip me up. Sentences I struggle with. But I’m not afraid to ask for help. I don’t need to have all the answers. I trust the One who does.

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How She Found Warmth and Self-Care on Christmas

I pulled my sweater tighter around my shoulders as I passed the words painted on my fireplace mantel: “If your heart is cold, my hearth will never warm you.” What it might take to truly warm my heart in time to celebrate the birth of our Lord, I didn’t know. Christmas was coming fast, and I wasn’t ready. Not deep down inside.

I turned to fluff the couch cushions but felt too restless to sit for a spell. At the same time, I didn’t have the energy to make a fire. I never hesitated to start one when Mom was here, I thought. But I no longer had her to care for, so what was the use?

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In the last months of her life with cancer, my mother spent all her weekends with me in my quaint log cabin that spoke to my nostalgic side. Mom’s body often pained her, so I did everything I could to make her comfortable. One afternoon she was on the sofa wrapped in a time-softened Sunbonnet Sue quilt, her feet poking out at one end for a foot rub. I’d scooted the sofa in front of the crackling fire and thought she’d drifted off to sleep while I massaged her heels. When I glanced up, Mom was gazing at the words on the mantel. “If you ever lose your way, Roberta,” she said, “this right here is how you find it.”

In some sense, I had lost my way since Mom died. I’d struggled with my own health problems and medical bills. I neglected the cozy home I loved, stopped switching out seasonal treasures from garage sales and secondhand stores. But my health had improved, friends helped get me back on my feet, and the cabin was tidy again. I looked into the brick hearth. So why do I still feel a coldness inside?

I tucked a pillow into Mom’s old spot on the couch, remembering the two of us sitting together one chilly afternoon, Christmas on the horizon. Mom was propped up on pillows with a hot cup of tea. I’d found a Victorian feather tree with white lights and ornaments, put it in an old crock and placed it in view. Our only real Christmas decoration that year. “So what do you think?” I asked her.

“The tree is beautiful,” she said. “But you know, Roberta, it always feels like Christmas here.”

I looked at the spot where the feather tree once sat in its crock. I’d agreed with Mom back then. Covering her with a quilt, whipping the cream potatoes she could still enjoy, propping her feet up—making Mom happy had made me happy too. Brewing her tea. Putting lotion on her hands. Brushing her hair. Taking care of her the way she’d once taken care of me. Caring for Mom had warmed my heart. But who did I have to care for now? I buttoned up my sweater. Well, I do have myself…

What would that look like, to give myself some tender loving care? What could I do now, just for me? The cabin presented lots of ideas.

The next morning, I collected pine boughs to fill my indoor window boxes, then lined up my nostalgic holiday collectibles by the chimney. I swapped out my everyday aprons for Christmas-themed ones. I hung a pair of old-time ice skates and a plaid woolen scarf by the front door. With renewed energy, I made up my bed with cheerful red-and-white linens and added a throw over the blanket just because.

On Christmas Eve, I laid three fat logs in the fireplace. I tucked newspapers all around them to start a really good blaze. I tossed in some pine cones to fill the room with a wintery scent. While the fire got going, I headed to the kitchen to warm a pan of milk for a decadent hot chocolate. When it was ready, mini marshmallows floating on top, I hooked a candy cane on the mug and settled down in front of the hearth. My feet were toasty in thick woolly socks; my favorite quilt was spread over my lap. I stirred my hot cocoa with the candy cane and took a careful sip so as not to burn my tongue. But the real warmth was in my heart. I had found my way, just where Mom had promised I would. I had someone to care for. I was cozy. I was loved. I was ready for Christmas deep down inside.

How She Coped with Her Husband’s Depression

One dark, freezing January morning four years ago, I drove to the hospital here in the city of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, to say goodbye to my husband, Herb. He was being taken to the only long-term psychiatric facility in the province, some four hours away, in North Battleford. I watched as he was strapped onto a gurney for the ambulance. “I’ll miss you,” I told him. “More than you know.” I was hoping for some sign that he heard me, but he was too sedated to even speak. I gave him a kiss that I knew would have to last a long time. Then the ambulance pulled out of the parking lot, and I followed it for miles through the darkness, until I lost sight of it at a four-way stop. It felt as if I were following a hearse, my husband gone to me forever.

In the fall of 2000, I hadn’t seen any of this coming. Herb had had surgery on his shoulder, which left him unable to do chores on our small farm in rural Saskatchewan for months. The bills kept coming, so we sold our cattle and rented out the farm to neighbors. By the time Herb recovered, we’d decided not to buy into the cattle business again, and he was hired to help with the seeding on our land. I thought it was a good solution, but Herb fell into a cycle of anxiety alternating with depression.

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“I feel like less of a man working my own land for wages,” he said. Gone was the vibrant man I’d fallen in love with and married 24 years earlier, the man who liked going to parties and playing cards, who could crack me up with his dry wit. Instead of taking care of things on the farm, Herb sprawled on the couch, staring at the ceiling. He’d always been such a neat and stylish dresser that I’d called him Mr. Perfect, but here he was moping around, slovenly and unshaven.

Before my marriage, I had worked as a psychiatric nurse, and I was sure God was giving me a chance to use my training. I thought Herb had situational depression, that I could heal him. I held his hand and encouraged him to share his feelings. “Let’s see if we can turn those thoughts into something positive,” I told him. “There’s not one positive thing in my life,” he said, looking down at the floor. When he was anxious, I tried to calm him by saying, “Just focus on the present moment.” “But the present is unbearable,” he said, following me from room to room, wringing his hands and crying.

Nothing I did made a difference. Several times Herb was admitted to the community hospital for his own safety. His pacing and pleas for someone to end his pain disturbed other patients, so he was kept sedated. I realized he needed more help than I could give, more than our rural hospital could provide. The closest hospital with a psychiatric unit where Herb could get regular care was in Moose Jaw, about five hours away. It was too expensive to travel back and forth. Our only option was to move to the city. By the grace of God, in the fall of 2004, we found a house we could afford just minutes from the hospital. I got a job as an assistant nurse in an extended care facility for seniors.

In the years that followed, Herb was rushed to the psychiatric unit many times. I lost track of how often the police responded to 911 calls because Herb told the operator, “I can’t live like this anymore.” I was terrified to leave him alone. I even changed my work schedule so that I could be with him during the day. I’d work the overnight shift, come home and sleep for a few hours until he got up at noon, then start the cycle all over again. Every time I had to get groceries or go to an appointment with my own doctor, I’d say, “I need to leave the house for a bit. Will you be all right?”

I would pray that he would be okay, but I’d often come home to find Herb had called 911. His psychiatrist put him on more pills, different pills. Herb underwent electroconvulsive shock therapy, transcranial magnetic stimulation. He would be released from the psychiatric unit feeling better, but the respite never lasted. Within six weeks, he would suffer a relapse of depression.

By the time Herb was sent to the long-term psychiatric facility in North Battleford, in 2015, I’d been fighting his demons for more than 15 years, and I knew I’d reached my limit. I was like the proverbial frog in the pot of hot water: I didn’t realize I was boiling until the heat had been turned all the way up. I called once a week to check on Herb, but I mostly spoke to the nurses. I didn’t talk to Herb much; it left him agitated and me in tears. I couldn’t even bring myself to visit him for the first several months because I was afraid they’d make me take him home when he wasn’t really well yet. Then I felt guilty for thinking that.

My sister urged me to join a grief group at the hospital in Moose Jaw. “You need to work through your feelings,” she said.

“Grief counseling when nobody has died is ridiculous,” I said. My sister kept pushing. Six weeks after Herb went to North Battleford, I decided to attend one meeting to get her off my back. Just one.

In the meeting room, a dozen chairs were arranged in a circle. I wanted the chair closest to the door so I could slip out, but a woman snagged it. The facilitator introduced herself as Ellen.

We went around the circle, sharing why we were there. One man had lost his daughter in a drowning. Another was grieving the death of his wife. Then it was my turn. Would everyone wonder why I was here when my loved one was still alive? “My husband is in long-term psychiatric care,” I said. To my surprise, people nodded sympathetically. It turned out that four of the 12 were dealing with problems other than death. Judy, the woman who’d taken that chair by the door, said she was grieving the loss of her childhood after having to care for her younger siblings. She looked to be in her sixties, like me.

Ellen pointed to a basket of rocks on the table in the center of our circle. “Everyone, take two rocks,” she said. “Now I want you to write in permanent marker a feeling you want to keep on one rock, and on the other, in washable ink, a feeling you want to get rid of.”

I wrote “hope” on one because hope was all I had left, not that there was much of it at this point. I wrote “resentment” on the other rock. Ellen asked us to explain the feelings we’d written on our rocks. “I resent Herb for…leaving me,” I managed to say. “That he’s not around for our children and grandchildren. That I have to take care of everything.” It was hard to get the words out, but it was a relief too.

Ellen wrote on a whiteboard the five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. “You might hit the stages at different times and in a different order,” she told us, “and some stages may resonate with you more than others.”

When the first session was over, our group went out for coffee. We chatted about what we’d learned that night, and I knew then I would be coming back. I felt supported by these strangers already. Judy leaned in close and asked what the last straw had been for me. “When I found Herb banging his head against the wall in the hallway, repeating, ‘I can’t take this anymore’ with every bang,” I said. That was when I’d realized we had to leave the farm and move to the city, where he could get better care.

The next week, our group tackled the stage of anger. Boy, did I have a lot to say then! I was angry at Herb for leaving me to clean up the mess his illness had made of our lives. I was angry that neither he nor most of our friends and family seemed to understand what I’d been going through all these years, caring for him and worrying that he’d take his life. I was angry at myself. Maybe things would have been different if I’d recognized right away that Herb was suffering something far deeper than situational depression. I was angry with the people who said I should let go of Herb and move on with my life.

Finally, I was angry that my faith was being tested so severely. I told the group about Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel: Nebuchadnezzar had lived with madness for seven years before God rescued him. I said to God, “You gave Nebuchadnezzar back his sanity, and I want the same for Herb!” I asked why Herb—and I—had to suffer so much longer. But maybe even God was tired of me begging for help.

The stage of depression too hit home for me. The constant roller coaster of caring for Herb had taken its toll. I was a bag of nerves and even experienced brief bouts of depression myself. I couldn’t imagine what it was like for Herb, sinking into that dark pit of despair with no end in sight. “Laugh, and the world laughs with you; weep, and you weep alone,” the poem may go, but not so in the group. I was so burned-out that I thought I couldn’t even cry anymore, but I found myself in tears over their stories. I felt their pain, and I knew that they could feel mine. Thank goodness we could express our feelings in the group and not be judged. For the first time in a long time, I actually felt my feelings instead of pushing them down.

For homework, Ellen asked us to write down the warm memories we had with our loved one. At first, all I could think of were the encounters with the police and being afraid to leave Herb alone, for fear he’d kill himself. I had to really pretzel my thinking into the positive to remember the good things: the births of our three children, farm parties and playing cards with friends, trips to the lake on summer afternoons. The more I wrote about happy times, the more I was able to see how blessed I’d been to have had so many good years with Herb. He’d been such a devoted husband and father.

The last stage, acceptance, I struggled with. What if Herb never got better? What if he never came home? I might have to live without the man I loved for the rest of my life. I might end up alone, no one sharing my golden years, no one to sit with in our rocking chairs and enjoy visits from our grandchildren. How could I accept that? I talked about how I’d felt I was experiencing a death of some kind when I was following the ambulance that took Herb away from me. The group helped me see that it was the end of my life as I knew it and, by acknowledging that, I was already in the process of accepting it.

Shortly after I’d begun the grief group, our son, Ray, invited me to go to his church with his family. I met the Young at Heart, a group of seniors who invited me to potluck suppers and to game and movie nights. The Young at Heart surrounded me with God’s love, and I felt encouraged to hope again for the future, no matter how uncertain.

At the end of the eight weeks of the grief group, we walked to the bridge behind the hospital and flung our rocks with the feelings we wanted to let go of into the water. I watched as my “resentment” sank to the bottom and made ripples radiating to the bank. I felt more at peace than I had in years.

Herb had been in North Battleford for a year when he called me and was able to carry on a conversation. He’d been put on a new combination of medications, and it was as if a switch had flipped. He asked about our family, something he hadn’t shown interest in for years. At last, after 20 months away, he came home. More than two and a half years later, he hasn’t had a single relapse. We’ve both changed under the weight of all those years he was ill, but for the most part, the kind and spirited man I married has been returned to me, the loving husband and doting father and grandfather. Now he’s the one who keeps the list of family and friends’ birthdays and anniversaries, making sure we don’t miss out on anything. He even carries on with our children on Facebook.

We hold hands and pray aloud together every morning. We pray for those we know who need God’s intervention, and then we say, “Thank you for our physical and mental health.” We know that we are not promised these precious things forever, but Herb and I are filled with gratitude for the present.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

How Richard Lui Makes Long-Distance Caregiving Work

Your dad, Stephen, was a pastor, social worker and vibrant part of his community. When did you notice that something wasn’t right with him?

Dad was a prayer guy. At our big family Christmas gathering, he always said this elaborate prayer that would take him a week to prepare. At the end he’d say, “Turn to your relatives to the left and the right and hug them and tell them why you love them.” Seven years ago when he gave his prayer, he forgot his siblings’ names. For decades, he had done this prayer. It was a big deal for the entire Lui clan that he couldn’t do it. My aunt took me aside and said, “I think your dad should see a doctor.” He’d always been very open to understanding sickness. And I think something about him was like “I’m sick. Let me go and try to fix this.” He went in and got diagnosed, and he never was down about it.

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You, along with your three siblings and your mom, are part of your dad’s caregiving team. They all live in California, and you fly in from New York. Besides visiting every few weeks, what are some of the ways you keep in contact?

We created a Google doc and list all of his doctors’ appointments, test results, medicines, activities, visitors, etc. It’s really helpful to have everything in one place so we don’t have to constantly call to ask for updates.

Read More: Top 5 Questions Caregivers Ask About Alzheimer’s

Anything else?

If you’re not sure where your loved one is in the disease, stay overnight. Don’t go for a meal or special occasion. Stay overnight because the bumps in the night are often more than bumps in the night. You won’t know the cause if you’re not there. I’d always stay overnight in the room I grew up in. And the days I wasn’t there, my mom told me my dad would go by my room, open the door and say, “Good night, Richard. Good night.”

What advice do you have for long-distance caregivers who get distressed if they can’t visit their loved ones?

Just own that it’s hard. Accept that you’re not perfect. Talk to someone about it. I think the biggest stress is, Am I making the right decision? If I stick with my job or don’t? If I call in sick? If I don’t see my family or my friends or my significant other? What is the right thing? And I think the struggle is thinking, I will never make the right decision. I’m in a no-win situation. But actually you are in an always-win decision if you are keeping your loved one in mind and what they would want you to do. Check out the Alzheimer’s Association website, alz.org, as well for great info and resources for caregivers.

Read More: Banner Alzheimer’s Institute Speeds Up the Search for a Cure

You’ve found that caregiving doesn’t have to be serious all the time. How has humor helped you and your family?

Finding some humor in all of this is very human and very necessary and doesn’t take away the difficulty, the sadness. When he was diagnosed, Dad was active and able to take care of himself. Now, seven years later, he’s living in a care facility. He’s bedridden and can’t feed himself. We are dealing with tough stuff. When he was still living at home and I started having to change him and clean him, he loved to run around the house naked. Sometimes he’d go, “Oh, I have to poop.” Boy, cleaning up his poop and helping with diapers—that freaked me out.

I knew this was a benchmark when Dad couldn’t take care of himself. I started to joke about it. And I hope it helped my siblings. We would use the poop emoji in our group texts when we took turns watching him. “Oh, he pooped today.” Then we would use one, two, three or four poop emojis. “He did a three. He did a two. He did a one.” It was really tough for my one brother who’s super clean and doesn’t like to talk about that stuff. But even he started to joke along with us.

You had to start shaving your father as well. That must have been difficult.

Dad had a morning ritual. Get up, eat his oats and milk and raisins. And shave. There came a point where he didn’t know how to do it anymore. I took out his electric razor. When I turned it on, he smiled. He liked the feel of it on his skin. And he squealed—whoo and yeah—like a kid. Dad had taught me how to shave, and I thought it was very symbolic of that shift of roles we go through, helping parents with Alzheimer’s. It was not only that I was shaving him but that it meant so much to him. I held his hand throughout the entire process. It was a moment of connection.

Read More: Just Be There: The Challenges of Caring for a Difficult Parent

How has your faith helped you as caregiver?

It’s definitely been a source of strength and comfort for me. We’re pastor’s kids. My eldest sibling texted in our group thread that he had just read John, chapter one, to Dad. We’re each reading a chapter when we visit. We pick up where the last sibling or Mom left off. For Dad, sound is definitely key. He loves the Lord and the Bible, and he can also hear and recognize our voices. He can’t talk anymore, but he does interact. When he’s keyed in, his eyes will look at you. He’ll smile.

Can you talk more about the importance of voice, sounds and music for your dad?

We can speak into an amplifier or have it play sounds. The connected headphones act as hearing aids. My dad was always hard of hearing. With Alzheimer’s, his senses need all the help they can get.

Read More: Join Guideposts in the Fight Against Alzheimer’s

You’ve said that watching the progression of Alzheimer’s was like watching your dad die a bit in front of you. And then being born again. Can you explain?

Dad was a real stressed-out guy when he was middle-aged. He took home all the problems of people he was trying to help as a social worker and a pastor. I think he was born again in that, despite this disease being part of his new life, he hasn’t gone back to worrying. He’s so positive. He’s the most wonderful patient. All the nurses love him because he would kiss everybody on the hand and smile and laugh with them. Life is a stack of pancakes, and Alzheimer’s takes the top pancakes little by little until you’re left with none. Even if this disease has stripped away all his memories like pancakes, well, look at him. Dad is a good, faithful man.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

How Recovery from Addiction Inspired a Life Calling

Several weeks ago, I attended an event in Harlem hosted by an organization that helps people battling addiction. After a 30-year career in advertising, its founder, Felicia, surrendered and admitted that she had been an addict for decades.

She is extremely grateful for her husband and children who stood by her during those difficult times. And it wasn’t until she got sober that she discovered her calling to help others battling the disease of addiction.

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Felicia works and cares for those who live in the same neighborhood that she was born and raised in. Her heart is full of compassion, love and care for the hurting. They are men and women who never dreamed of becoming addicted to drugs and/or alcohol, but due to the twists and turns of life, found themselves fighting to break free.

In addition, Felicia helps at-risk youth who have great potential but are lacking in resources and support. She opens her office to all who need help; no one is rejected.

Often, our calling reveals itself through life experiences—good and bad. If you are uncertain of your true purpose, look at what you have been through, what you have overcome. Most importantly, look within yourself.

I have met many individuals like Felicia who found their calling when overcoming their deepest struggles. In their giving of themselves, they continue to be renewed and restored to the person God always intended them to be.

How Reading Can Make You Happier

“Reading fiction makes me lose all sense of self,” wrote Ceridwen Dovey in a beautiful 2015 essay in The New Yorker, “but at the same time makes me feel most uniquely myself.”

Dovey’s reflections on reading came from an experience she had with “bibliotherapy,” the practice of reading with a therapeutic goal in mind. She quotes a 1916 article from the same magazine that explained the practice this way: “Bibliotherapy is…a new science. A book may be a stimulant or a sedative or an irritant or a soporific. The point is that it must do something to you, and you ought to know what it is. A book may be of the nature of a soothing syrup or it may be of the nature of a mustard plaster.”

No wonder the ancient Greeks described the library at Thebes as a “healing place for the soul.”

In an age of socially interactive screen time, reading a book, be it fiction, memoir, nonfiction or graphic novel, can become a uniquely gratifying activity. Reading takes us out of our lives and into another world, real or imagined. It takes us inside other minds, shows us new views and perspectives. And it can bring us great joy.

A 2016 survey conducted by researchers at the University of Liverpool’s Centre for Research into Reading, Literature and Society (CRILS) explored how those who read for pleasure fare in stress management, confidence, decision-making and other emotional factors.

More than a third of those surveyed called reading “the ultimate stress remedy,” and more than a quarter said reading had inspired them to make a positive change in their lives. Thirty-five percent said reading books is most likely to bring them comfort when they are feeling down.

“The positive effects that reading can have on society are widely documented and what has been made abundantly clear by this research is that books can help us to enjoy the little things in life, and be happier in ourselves; a useful and timely reminder for all of us to draw on the many benefits that only reading can deliver,” said Josie Billington, the Centre’s deputy director.

The range of benefits reading can bring, from profound therapeutic exploration to regular stress management, make it an essential practice those on a positive path through life.

And more good news—as “summer reading” season draws toward its conclusion, the months of cozy, cool evenings beckon. What better way to enjoy them than curled up with a good book?

How Poetry Healed This Lonely Widower

My wife, Barbara, and I had been married more than 50 years when she was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer in October 2010. I was devastated.

Even though I had been a professional athlete—a forward in the American Hockey League—in my younger days, Barbara had always been the healthy one (at age 72, she still jogged daily), the steady one, the one who never missed a day of work. I was seven years older and I used to joke that I would be long gone before her. But here the doctor was telling us that she had only three to six months left.

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I couldn’t bear to think about life without Barbara. We came home from the cancer center and went back to our daily routine—reading the Bible and talking over coffee in the morning, taking an hour-long walk together later in the day—but it would never be the same again. I had difficulty talking with her because I just wanted to cry.

I prayed many prayers for her to be healed. But her health declined rapidly. Soon our walks dwindled to 20 minutes. Then Barbara stopped walking altogether. Our oldest daughter, Ann, took unpaid leave from her job as a nurse to care for Barbara.

One day Barbara asked us to stop praying for a healing and start praying for a quick passing on. Sadness overtook me, yet I couldn’t help noticing a complete peace in her eyes.

It was then that I remembered the dream Barbara had told me about a year before her diagnosis. She had dreamed that she was in a high place looking down on a clear river. She saw a calendar moving swiftly in the river. “What do you think it means?” she’d asked me.

“Did you see a date on the calendar?”

“No, it was moving too fast,” she said.

The dream had fascinated her, and she would talk about it from time to time, trying to puzzle out its meaning.

Now I understood what her dream meant. The calendar represented her life passing through time, moving swiftly toward her earthly end. Heaven, with its crystal-clear river as described in the Book of Revelation, was just ahead. And she was looking forward to being there.

In her final moments, I kissed her and said, “I love you.” Tears flowing, I read Psalm 23. As I came to the last line, “I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever,” Barbara glanced up and whispered, “Amen.” A smile crept across her face, and she entered heaven’s door.

I knew Barbara had gone to be with the Lord, but I felt so empty and lost. We had been true partners in life, even though we were very different. I was an outgoing optimist; Barbara was more of a cautious realist. That was probably why she didn’t like me at first.

We’d met at a Pennsylvania restaurant. I was there with my teammates from the AHL’s Hershey Bears. Barbara, a secretary, was having lunch with colleagues from the Hershey Chocolate Corporation. She was the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen. I knew I couldn’t let her leave without talking to her. So I walked up and introduced myself. I told her I played for the Hershey Bears. Barbara knew nothing about hockey and wasn’t impressed by my job or my bravado. But I persisted and, in the course of two years of dating, won her over.

Barbara and I married in 1959. She was thrust into hockey, a sport she didn’t grow up with as I had. I came from a small town in Canada known for producing pro hockey players. I started skating at five. I loved hockey so much that everything else, including school, took a back seat. I dropped out and signed with a junior league team. In 1952, at 21, I made my professional debut with the Pittsburgh Hornets.

There were practices in the morning, team meetings in the afternoon, games at night. There were road trips and media coverage. There were one-year employment contracts that could expire with one serious injury. There were all these Canadian characters like me with big egos who liked drinking beer. That was life in the AHL, a life outside Barbara’s comfort zone.

Yet she adapted. She left her job, following me as I signed with different teams. Hockey often took me on the road, and Barbara took care of our four children and our off-season home in Canada. I played 20 years in the AHL, retiring as the league’s all-time leader in goals, assists, points and games played.

We settled near Buffalo, New York. I managed a sports arena, which kept me connected to the game I loved. Barbara worked in customer service for Ivaco, a manufacturer of steel products. We had date nights every week. Our kids were thriving, though Ann missed Canada. One day Barbara and I found a note on the kitchen table, saying, “I’m running away.” We’d had no idea Ann, only 17, was so unhappy.

Finally Ann called. She and her boyfriend had hitchhiked to California. She called us every few weeks to tell us about her new life. She was staying at her boyfriend’s relative’s home, where she’d met a woman who introduced her to the Bible and to talking to God about salvation. Ann got a job and seemed to be doing fine. What could I say? I’d left home to play hockey when I was her age.

Ann started sending us Christian tracts. Barbara and I didn’t know what to make of them. Though we considered ourselves Christians, we didn’t even own a Bible back then. About a year after Ann ran away, a way opened for her to see me in Hollywood, California.

Ann and her friends met me in my hotel room. She looked happier, more peaceful and more confident than ever before. Ann and her friends read from the Bible and talked to me about Jesus. Then they asked me to say a prayer of faith. I fell to my knees and invited Jesus Christ into my life. There were no bells or whistles or angelic music, but I knew something monumental had happened. For the first time, I felt God’s presence, something stronger than even hockey or my marriage.

At age 51, I started reading the Bible. And God changed everything as only he can. I became more of a giver and less of a taker. I stopped judging people and began to love them instead. Barbara was put off by my new faith but surprised by these changes in me. What really shocked her was when I quit drinking. I liked my beer and could never stop at just one. Then one day I walked into my favorite bar and ordered a beer. I’d only drunk a quarter of the bottle when I felt a deep conviction that I should pay the bill and walk out. I haven’t had a drink since.

Barbara connected the changes in me with the Bible and secretly began reading it. I had no idea until the day she embraced me, sobbing, and confessed she needed Jesus in her life. After that, we became partners in faith as well, growing closer than ever.

In 1999, with our children grown, we moved to Georgia for Barbara’s job. She confidently assumed the role of breadwinner while I took on all the domestic work. I felt awkward in my new role (and my cooking was less than stellar) but like a winger covering for a rushing defenseman, I wanted Barbara to know I had her back.

Then something really strange happened. I found myself drawn to—of all things—poetry. I was sitting next to our grandfather clock, reading the Bible, when these words bubbled up to the rhythm of the ticking clock:

Tick, tock, the clock is ticking, ticking away,

The Lord is coming; He’s on His way

He’s coming soon, and He will have His say

On Judgment Day, on Judgment Day.

Words kept cascading into my mind. I ended up writing seven stanzas. Barbara typed up the poem for me. We both thought it was a onetime thing.

But poems kept coming to me. Barbara edited them and typed them up. We put the poems together into two collections of Christian poetry. But what was I supposed to do with them? One night I asked, “Lord, how can I use these poems to spread your message?”

The next morning, I was led to a nearby nursing home. I asked to speak with the activities director. “I’d like to begin a ministry for your senior citizens,” I told her, showing her my poems. She said, “We actually have a group already assembled and waiting for an activity. Can you meet with them now?”

She brought me to the room. I looked at the dozen senior citizens, deeply moved. They were in their last years, and God had chosen me to help guide them. I ended the session with a prayer of salvation. Many of them joined in.

That was only the beginning. I expanded my ministry to other nursing homes in the area, and when Barbara and I moved back to Hershey after her retirement in 2004, I brought my ministry to nursing homes there. All through Barbara’s illness, she urged me to continue my work, and I never missed a day.

Perhaps that was why, after her death, something told me to stick to my daily routine. Ann, who had extended her leave to stay with me, helped by having coffee with me in the morning and going for walks with me in the afternoon.

“Mom would want you to carry on,” Ann said on one of our walks. Many senior citizens are lonely and need comfort, and after Barbara died, I was right there with them. If I can still do this, I thought, I can survive without her.

As the months went by, I grew busy again with my poems and ministry, as well as the occasional hockey get-together. (Being back in Hershey reconnected me with Bears alumni.)

The Lord’s hand has steered my life, from a hockey-crazed kid from Canada to a humble Christian poet. He gave me Barbara, without whom my life would have been empty. And he has healed my grief, filling my soul until he calls me to the place where my beloved Barbara lives, a place with a crystal-clear river and no more tears. 

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