Embrace God's truth with our new book, The Lies that Bind

Guideposts Classics: Colonel Sanders on Life After 65

Some people spend a good share of their lives planning for retirement, but the idea has never appealed to me. I guess I’m from the old school. I believe that God expects us to be productive—in some way—all of our days.

It has long been my philosophy that a man will rust out a lot sooner than he will wear out, and that is why today at age 78, I have no intention, no desire, no inclination to sit down and get rusty.

Oh, I’m not as tough as I was a few years ago. My feet and legs bother me sometimes, and my wind isn’t as strong, but I have no complaints. Teddy Roosevelt, I believe it was, said that 90 per cent of the work in this country is done by people who don’t feel well, so I’ve got company.

I had a good chance to retire at 63, but I couldn’t see any percentage in loafing. At the time, I was located in Corbin, Kentucky, where my wife and I had settled in 1929.

We went there from Kentucky’s Bluegrass country and opened a service station after the Depression hit. The station evolved into a restaurant and motel, which by 1954 had grown quite successful. That was about the time a man offerred me $165,000 for the business.

Now, if I’d been planning to spend the rest of my life suntanning, this would have been the time to jump. But my wife and I decided against selling. We liked the restaurant business because it brought us into contact with people—and we love people.

Then the blow fell. The state resurveyed the road that ran in front of our place, Sanders Court and Care; and when the highway was rerouted, we were cut off from the traffic. Business fell off, and by 1956, we were lucky to get out with enough to pay the bills.

Was I finished at age 65? It seemed so. My wife and I were completely discouraged.

When we walked out of our motel-restaurant for the last time, it seemed like a million memories passed through my mind.

I remembered at age five when my father died, leaving my mother with two small children and another on the way. There was the time I had lost my first job (clearing a woods for $2 a month) at age ten.

Then I had dropped out of school in the sixth grade to go to work. A series of jobs followed: house painter, soldier, fireman on the railroad, ferryboat operator, chamber-of-commerce secretary, insurance salesman and acetylene-lamp salesman.

I even practiced for a while as a lawyer after receiving a degree through a correspondence course.

When we started into the restaurant business, I recalled our first try at serving meals. We had just one table and six chairs. (It was to grow to 142 chairs.) There was the struggle for mortgage money, the long hours, hard work, growing friendships.

Little things came back to me, like the road signs I had painted myself on the sides of barns for 150 miles in both directions on Route 25. They advertised our motel and our food, especially our chicken. (I reasoned that hunters were less likely to shoot the hearts out of “o’s” if the signs were on barns instead of billboards.)

All that came to an end in 1956. My wife and I were still talking about our next move when my first Social Security check arrived. It was for $105.

“That won’t go very far,” I remember telling her. Then I had a wild idea. The restaurant business was my line, and fried chicken our specialty. Many people who had passed through Corbin had wished that we had a restaurant in their town in Florida or in Illinois or in Texas.

Why couldn’t I take our recipe for fried chicken on the road and try to franchise it?

As always when on strange footing, I said a prayer in which I asked God to direct my steps and bless this new idea if it was right. All my life I have given Him 10 percent of everything I made in my work.

Cashing the $105 check, I loaded into my 1946 Ford the following items: a pressure cooker, a 50-pound tin of flour (containing a mixture made from 11 herbs and spices) and a blanket to sleep under.

My offer to restaurateurs was a simple one: I would show them how to fry chicken in exchange for their promise to pay me five cents for every chicken they sold.

It would be on the honor system. I had no intention of auditing anyone’s books, because I figured it would take a rather cheap thief to fudge on that arrangement.

I drove all over the country, sleeping many nights in the car to save money. Quite often I got a free meal from restaurant friends. One of them, Pete Harmon of Salt Lake City, bought the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise.

The second sale was made in Indianapolis, and the third in Kokomo, Indiana. After that, business began to boom. A car wasn’t adequate enough to take me from place to place, and I began flying.

By 1964, in just eight years, I had 600 franchises operating on the honor system and more bookkeeping work than I knew what to do with.

When I was offered two million dollars for the business, I sold out, but agreed to continue working in a public-relations capacity.

If I have learned anything in life, it can be summed up this way:

Hard work beats all the tonics and vitamins in the world.

The therapy of work is good for you whatever your age. Will Rogers years ago said life begins at 40. Times have changed. People are living longer, fuller, more creative lives. So I say, “Life can begin again at 65.” It sure did for me.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guideposts Classics: Chuck Yeager on Aging with Positivity

All my life I’ve flown planes: as a World War II fighter pilot, as the first test pilot to fly faster than the speed of sound. Here I am, 62 years old, and you might think I’ve had my fill of flying. No, sir. I still get a lot of pleasure out of flying an F-20 jet fighter.

But I know too many people who have erected barriers, real brick walls, just because they have gray hair, and prematurely cut themselves off from lifelong enjoyments by thinking, I’m too old to do this or that—that’s for younger people.

Living to a ripe old age is not an end in itself; the trick is to enjoy the years remaining. Unfortunately, many people do not consider fun an important item on their daily agenda. For me, that has always been high priority in whatever I’m doing.

Not long ago the Piper Aircraft people asked me to fly one of their airplanes nonstop from Seattle to Atlanta, to try to establish a new distance speed record. I did it, shaving a couple of hours off the old record. Nobody needs to remind me of how lucky I am. Or how blessed I’ve been by God.

People don’t change just because they grow older. What was fun at 24 is still fun at 62, and I fly, hunt and fish every chance I get. I’m not as limber as I was, but I can still pull eight or nine G’s in a high-performance aircraft, just as I did years ago. And I’m not alone: The two best pilots I’ve known, Andy Anderson and Bob Hoover, fly as much as they can. Bob is still giving air shows around the country every weekend, just as he did back at Dayton’s Wright Field in the early 1950s.

Given our backgrounds and experience, we aren’t doing anything extraordinary. We still have our eyes, reflexes and good health, so strapping us inside an airplane’s cockpit is no different from a 60-year-old driver’s turning on his car engine.

Life is as unpredictable as flying in combat. If the day comes when a flight surgeon tells me I can’t fly anymore in high-performance jets, I can always sneak out back and fly ultralights. Just like when the day dawns that my friend Andy and I can’t manage our treks into the Sierra to fish for golden trout—well, there are still nearby lakes and plenty of rowboats.

You do what you can for as long as you can, and when you finally can’t, you do the next best thing. You back up but you don’t give up.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guideposts Classics: Carol Heiss on Living with Purpose

There came a moment of special torment for me during the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley, California. For 14 years I had worked hard for that very moment, but when it came I was scared to death of it.

Over 8,000 people were crowding the skating arena, a battery of TV cameras was bringing I don’t know how many millions of spectators close to rinkside, but now I was thinking about only nine people, the nine judges for whom I had to do the best skating of my life.

For days I’d felt nervousness coming and going in spasms. Part of it was the excitement of the spectacle; some of it was the responsibility of representing our country and, too, there was the memory of four years before when I had been beaten.

Today would be my last Olympics, I knew that. I had to win now if I was going to keep the promise I’d made Mother…

“Ready, Carol?” someone said.

How do you answer a question like that, after 14 years of preparation?

“God,” I whispered, eyes closed, “please let me do the best I can.”

Then I saw the swirl of my red skirt and the glint of the sun on a steel blade and I realized that I was out there alone.

For four minutes and ten seconds I skated. I don’t remember much about those minutes, only that the jumps and turns and complicated figures seemed to take an eternity to execute. At last I was finished.

Then there was the long anticlimax of waiting while other nations competed. Finally the Stars and Stripes fluttered from the highest pole and I stood on the winner’s podium with a gold medal.

What did I feel? Happiness, relief, gratitude, loneliness. People swarmed to congratulate me and telegrams were arriving. Pierre Brunet, my coach and booster of 12 years, hovered nearby, shining with pride.

But still I was lonely. I wanted to be able to reach out to my sister Nancy and brother Brucie back home; I wanted to hug my father–or just see the expression on his face.

Dad couldn’t come with me; he was a baker back home in Ozone Park, Long Island, and he hadn’t the time or the money for a trip to California. Most of all, though, I wanted the impossible: I wanted to be able to say to Mother:

“Look! Here’s the gold medal.”

It had been Mother’s idea that I take up skating. I was five years old when she enrolled me in The Brooklyn Skating Club. If I hadn’t taken to skating, Mother would have seen to it that I tried something else because she believed in the fun and discipline that an earnest effort at athletics provided.

Of course, I did like skating and for the next 14 years I was off the ice for a period no longer than four weeks at one stretch. Eventually, Nancy, two years younger than I joined me at the rink, and in another two years, Brucie.

We liked to practice in pairs or as a trio, and we came to know that whatever we did well, we did for Mother. She was always there at rinkside, slender and youthful, twinkling with encouragement.

It wasn’t that Mother just sat and watched us, however. She was an artist and a textile designer and would bring her art work with her. What she accomplished while we skated helped to pay for our lessons and membership fees.

Other times she would be knitting our skating clothes–Mother was always busy.

When I was seven, Pierre Brunet became my instructor. It got so that I could hardly wait for a lesson from this wonderful man who, in turn, began to take a serious look at my skating potential.

“You’re a natural athlete,” he told me, “but you’re not a natural form skater.” Only through long, intensive training, Mr. Brunet thought, would I become a fine figure skater.

When I was eight, with competition in view, with more money to be spent on equipment and dues and other necessities, Mother sat me down for a very sober talk.

“Do you really love skating?” she asked me. And of course I did. “Well then, Carol, you have to decide, now, whether you are going to skate just for the fun of it or very seriously.”

To me the choice was no choice; “serious” skating was fun. Nonetheless, this was the important moment of my life. Then and there, a goal had been set. From then on we aimed for the top.

There were eight formal tests to pass before qualifying for championship competition; these took almost nine years to accomplish. Meanwhile, skating ruled our house.

Six days a week the family was up at 5:30 A.M. We left the house at 6:15, dropped Dad at the bakery in Kew Gardens, laced on our skates in Manhattan at 7:00. At 11:30 we’d head for Professional Children’s School and at 4:00 we’d be back in Ozone Park doing our homework.

Dinner was at 6:00 and then, at 8:30, we’d go to bed. Often our days included ballet and piano lessons (to develop a musical ear), and summer activities like outings at the beach, but basically, for 11 years, our schedule was unchanged.

Sometimes when I tell people about this daily regimen, a look of pity comes on their faces. I think these people do not realize the fun we had or the richness we discovered in being together. What frightens people is not the hard work we put in, but the routine.

The word “routine” can have an ugly sound, calling forth pictures of dull sameness, conformity, rigidity. But when you are working towards something, routine can be an adventure.

I can’t tell you the thrill I’d feel when a jump I had been practicing for months would suddenly start coming easily to me. The surge of power was exhilarating.

And I don’t think that the bright side of a routine is reserved just for skaters! Surely even the dullest-sounding task can be made to have flavor and excitement.

I’ve known people who have found gratification in seemingly unrewarding routine–housework, for instance. If the goal is to create a happy and loving family, why shouldn’t washing dishes and preparing meals possess a special drama all their own?

In Philippians 3:13-14, Paul writes: …This one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth into those things which are before, I press toward the mark…

For me, I had to do without many things because of skating; there were dates that I missed, and movies and lots of things that teen-agers normally enjoy, but life was never lacking in interest or fullness.

“Live deep instead of fast” was a statement that Mother once read to us from a magazine article. She believed in that. It was always as though she were saying that life is indeed brief, that no part of any day should be frittered away on surface matters.

Routine with a purpose, we learned, was the best cure for waste and laziness.

Our goal of goals was the Olympics. Yet, when I finally won the opportunity to compete, we were faced with tragedy. Mother was dying of cancer. Nonetheless, we traveled together to the Olympics in Italy that winter and every day she was at the rink as usual, I wanted desperately to win–for her.

I skated well that day. As always, I performed better before an audience, felt my muscles and body react to the crowd, and when I sped off the ice, I was hopeful. But Tenley Albright beat me by two-tenths of a point.

“It’s not really losing,” Mother said, and she wasn’t just easing the pain I felt at having failed. “Everyone gains something, win or lose.”

“Yes,” I replied, “I know that. But,” and I looked at her hard, “at the next Olympics–I’ll win.”

A few weeks later, in Germany, I beat Tenley Albright for the world championship–but to me it wasn’t the same as winning an Olympics gold medal. A month later, at home, Mother died. She was 41 and she did not want to die. There were “so many things to do.”

Today, my father lives alone in the house in Ozone Park. Both Nancy and Brucie are away at school, skating on their own. Nancy has a high national ranking; she missed last year’s Olympic Games only because of an ankle injury. Bruce, at 16, is Middle Atlantic Men’s Champ.

I am 21 now, and married to a skating champion-turned-lawyer, Hayes Allen Jenkins. We live in an apartment in Akron, Ohio, where, along with a new skating schedule and plans for motion pictures, I am caught up in meals and laundry and household chores.

The medals I have won are in a drawer and if, occasionally, I look at them, it is to remind me of what a wonderful beginning my life has had, and what power there is in purpose.

More stories from Winter Olympians!

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guideposts Classics: Ben Vereen on Using God’s Gifts

One night while I was appearing in my biggest Broadway hit, a show called Pippin, I was in my dressing room relaxing after a demanding performance of song, dance and mime when my good friend Shirley MacLaine came backstage to see me.

“When did it happen, Ben?” she asked, her face all aglow with enthusiasm. “You were such a quiet youngster on the set when we made Sweet Charity together, and now look at you—out on that big stage—doing all those wonderful things. When did it happen?”

I could have answered her, but it would have taken hours to explain. So I just passed it off with the flip remark, “Well, I guess I’ve finally graduated from my apprenticeship.”

In my heart I knew what she meant. I held been a very quiet, introverted person when I made that movie with Shirley. But that was because I hadn’t yet found my true self. At that time. I was a performer who was deeply tormented by guilt.

Shirley’s remark put everything in focus, and I found myself reviewing my life and the choices I had made.

I was born in Florida, but when I was very young, my family moved to the rough Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. My mother was a domestic who worked for a time as a wardrobe mistress for Broadway shows. She was from Louisiana, and could she sing the blues!

My father was a church deacon who also worked in a paint factory to support our growing family. It was in his church that I first discovered my talents as a singer. When I was four, I sang my first solo there—and experienced my initial joy at entertaining people.

In the slums where we lived, there was only one place where young people could enjoy themselves and show off their talents—the street. I lacked the athletic abilities that offered instant status, but I did have a talent for dancing—and that won me the nickname of “Twinkle Toes.”

It was my godfather, the Reverend Eddie, an itinerant preacher, who took me off the streets. He started taking me along on his spiritual rounds.

Whenever a minister went on vacation, my godfather would substitute for him, conducting services and visiting the congregation in their homes. He ministered to people and comforted the poor and sick.

“Wherever the flock of God is. I will be there,” he would say to me. As I grew older I realized that Reverend Eddie was the closest follower of Jesus I knew. Like Jesus, he went among the people and ministered to them. I decided that I wanted to become a minister like my godfather.

The conflict in my life began soon after that when my mother was convinced by a salesman that my natural talents as a dancer could win me fame and fortune if I enrolled in a local dancing school.

My mother loved the theater, so she gladly made the sacrifice, and soon I was dancing away with a bunch of other kids—all of us bent on becoming Bill Robinsons and Fred Astaires.

At first I took the classes casually, but the more I danced, the more I liked it. I seemed to have a natural talent for it, as I had for singing, and I spent lots of time practicing, while also continuing to practice my religion.

It was when I began appearing in public and basking in the glow that came from an audience’s applause that my conscience started to bother me. I felt that by singing worldly songs and dancing worldly steps, I was turning my back on my religion.

It wasn’t that my parents or my godfather actively opposed my new career. They didn’t. It was just that I felt agonizing guilt for wanting to be an entertainer. That guilt became a crushing burden.

Everything I did outside the church during this period when I was starting a musical career filled me with remorse. Our church was desperately trying to get a hearing for gospel music on the radio.

The networks only wanted pop music—except maybe on Sundays. Here I was dancing and singing frivolous songs in public instead of doing something to promote religious music on the air.

While I was suffering all those doubts, I married into a religious family, and their quiet devotion to their beliefs doubled my guilt. Then, almost too coincidentally, I appeared in an off-Broadway musical play, The Prodigal Son, that reflected my own life.

I played Brother Luke, a minister who leaves his church to seek religion in the outside world. Instead. he finds only emptiness and loneliness. In the end, he returns to the church.

I felt that it was a good Biblical play, but when it flopped, I regarded it as an omen that God was punishing me for being a performer instead of a minister. I was so afraid of God and the possibility of His vengeance that I decided to enter the ministry.

I studied for the ministry for six months. But fear is poor motivation for that calling. So, still full of fears and doubts, I left the ministry and returned to the world of entertainment. The reason I gave to myself was that maybe bringing enjoyment to people would please God.

So I began calling on God before going on stage at every performance. I would say things like this to Him, “I’m going out there to minister to a lot of people—please guide me.”

But I still couldn’t relax completely or throw myself into roles with total conviction because I couldn’t seem to rid myself of the feeling that I had failed God by not becoming a minister.

This went on for a long time. Then one Saturday I stayed up all night after a performance meditating and agonizing about my dilemma. Suddenly I heard a voice.

“Why do you fear Me?” it asked gently. “What have I done to you but given you life. I love you. Why have they taught you to fear Me?”

Those were not words I had read or heard, yet the voice seemed familiar. It was a voice that I had heard before, whenever I was deep in prayer.

The voice went on. and I wrote down what I heard. “I speak to you and I call your name on the wind and on the wing of a bird. Why have they taught you to fear Me?”

It was an incredible, life-changing experience. After that morning, I no longer feared God. Not only that. my guilt feelings about being in show business disappeared. My next show on Broadway was Jesus Christ Superstar in which I played Judas.

I read the Bible over and over in preparation for that role and found in it all the answers to the fears that had haunted my life, answers like the opening lines of Psalm 27: “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?”

In my next show, Pippin, I received not only my greatest notices, but a Tony Award as well for the best performance of the season by a male actor in a musical.

So, when Shirley MacLaine asked me that question backstage—“When did it happen. Ben?”—I realized that my liberation from guilt was complete.

It had begun that quiet Sunday morning when God spoke to me. He made me realize at last that by using the talents He had given me I was making the best possible use of His gift of life.

Isn’t that true for all of us?

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guideposts Classics: Art Carney on God’s Healing Power

One morning two years ago I was taking out the trash when I felt a quick, sharp pain in my chest. What was that? I wondered, a bit scared for the obvious reason. I tried to shrug it off as just a passing ache of old age. Maybe a muscle spasm or heartburn. Nothing to worry about, I assured myself. And surely nothing to worry anyone else about. Back inside the house, the pain faded.

I’m not one to confide my troubles, even to my wife, Jean, though if I do turn to someone it’s her. Most people assume actors are garrulous and outgoing, but without a script in my hand I’m often at a loss for words. Besides, I didn’t want to scare Jean or make a fuss out of something that was probably no big deal. Best not to dwell on it.

Celebrating Guideposts' 75th AnniversaryThen one pleasant day I drove to Bradley International Airport to meet a friend who had come to visit. I had grabbed her two large bags from the luggage belt and was walking to our car when I suddenly felt as if a fist were clenching my heart. I put the bags down for a second to catch my breath. Jean and our friend were up ahead, busily chatting.

READ MORE: ART CARNEY ON FAITH AND FRIENDSHIP

Again I decided to stay silent. The pain would pass, I was sure, and by the time I threw the bags in the trunk of our car it had. But the memory lingered, and a week later, when the tightness in my chest returned, sharper and longer this time and with no precipitating physical strain, I finally confessed to Jean, “I think we’d better see a doctor.”

We went to Dr. Stephen Franklin, a well-recommended cardiologist. Laid-back and reassuring, Dr. Franklin couldn’t help but frown when I mentioned that this had not been my first episode of chest pain. “You didn’t tell anyone?” he asked, raising an eyebrow and scribbling on my chart.

Over the next couple of weeks I was put on a treadmill for a stress test, underwent an echocardiography and began taking heart medication. Dr. Franklin still wasn’t satisfied, and I was getting nervous. One day he asked, “Ever have any leg problems, Art?”

“Some,” I answered, tapping my right leg and explaining I had had a total knee implant to alleviate arthritis that had resulted from my catching some German shrapnel on a battlefield in France shortly after D-Day.

“Then we’ll have to use your left for the angiogram,” he said evenly.

I felt a wave of apprehension break over me, but I just nodded my head and said that was fine.

The procedure started with me swallowing some stuff that smelled like insecticide, followed by the insertion of a catheter-like probe into a leg artery. Dr. Franklin threaded the device up into the chambers of my heart, where he was able to look for arterial blockage. He concentrated intensely on his work. When he was through he gently but firmly informed me that coronary bypass surgery was imperative.

READ MORE: JAMIE FARR ON THE POWER OF PRAYER

“Don’t worry, Art. Bypass surgery has become virtually routine in this day and age. You’ll do just fine.”

What wasn’t routine was that I would require a quintuple bypass.

When I got home that day I retreated to the bedroom, where I could be alone. I started pacing and worrying. At 77, I was facing major surgery—open-heart surgery. I threw myself into a big easy chair, hoping to harness my racing panic. I stared at the blue walls filled with family photos of Jean, our three children and six grandchildren, sharply aware of how much I loved them.

I could not face this alone. I knew that. I would need my family and I would need the One who was the greatest physician of all. I implored God with all the strength I had, “I have not been one of your best servants, but I never stopped believing in you. I know Jean is praying. I need you too. Forgive me and help me.”

A few days later I was admitted to Hartford Hospital. My anxiety diminished considerably when I met Dr. Hiroyoshi Takata, the man who would operate on me. He was open and unassuming; I sensed at once God had placed me in good hands.

While I waited on a gurney in pre-op the morning of my surgery, Jean and our children, Eileen, Brian and Paul, prayed. Silently I joined them: God, please give comfort to my family. Then I was wheeled into the operating room.

READ MORE: HOW DANNY THOMAS KEPT HIS PROMISE

The surgery went well and by the next day I was put into step-down intensive care, for patients who are expected to recover without complications. It was as I lay there in my hospital bed, weak, in pain and uncertain about the future, that I became aware of a figure in the room with me.

I was fully conscious, and though I was surprised by his appearance, I was unafraid. The figure stood quietly before me. He was wrapped in a soft, diaphanous material that appeared to be as much air as fabric. I couldn’t take my eyes off the figure. My gaze was held by an irresistible attraction. I heard a voice, rich and reassuring, say the words: “You are being given a new beginning.”

I leaned closer to the vision and saw…me. What I was looking at was a version of myself, healthy, strong, well again. I had a glow to my face. Yes, it was me, a new me. I was filled with peace and joy and a feeling of wellness, wholeness. I realized I had been powerfully blessed by God, shown the gift of health he wanted me to have.

As soon as Jean arrived that day I couldn’t stop myself from telling her what had happened. “I was wide awake. I’m certain of it,” I said. “This was no dream or hallucination. This was real.” She squeezed my hand reassuringly and pressed her cheek to mine.

The strangest thing happened the next morning. I awoke sobbing. I wasn’t in pain; I wasn’t unhappy. In fact, I felt better than I ever had. I just couldn’t stop. I couldn’t stop crying a purifying torrent of tears. It felt good, a cosmic sense of relief and release, as if my soul had been bathed in love.

Later, Jean said it sounded like “a cleansing of the spirit.” I had never heard that expression but I understood it intuitively at once. “Sometimes,” she explained, “people who have undergone a religious experience can’t stop their tears. It is a kind of blessing.”

A religious experience? Is that what I had had? Something had happened, something powerful and irreversible. If it was God, touching my life with an incredible vision, then I could only believe I was no longer the same person I had been before. I was the person I had been shown.

READ MORE: ANDY GRIFFITH ON GOD’S GRACE

I recovered with unprecedented swiftness, spending only seven days in the hospital. I went through some tough physical therapy and today I possess more vigor than I have had in years. The most enduring transformation, however, has been in the way I live.

An introvert since childhood, I was most comfortable on stage or on camera. Since that amazing day in the hospital I’ve been able to open up to the people I love and who love me. I’ve stopped trying to hide who I am. I don’t turn my eyes away from strangers or retreat into silence. And that, more than anything, is a freedom I had never known before.

A healing voice assured me I should have no fear, that I would be well again. I am better than well. I am changed.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guideposts Classics: Andy Griffith on God’s Grace

Each of us faces pain, no two ways about it. But I firmly believe that in every situation, no matter how difficult, God extends grace greater than the hardship, and strength and peace of mind that can lead us to a place higher than where we were before.

Let me tell you about one of the hardest times in my own life, and how I found this to be true.

I had been alone for a long time when I met an extraordinary woman named Cindi Knight. She had come to Manteo, N.C., to be in a production of The Lost Colony, a summer play in which I had got my start several decades before.

Our relationship began as a friendship, but as the months passed, I couldn’t help but notice her strong faith and gentle strength. Did I mention she was also quite beautiful? Somehow she fell in love with me. Five years after we met as friends, we became husband and wife.

When she married me in April 1983, I was not at the pinnacle of my career. Ageism is rampant in Hollywood, and although I was only in my fifties, work was getting harder and harder to find.

Cindi had had frequent and major attacks of sore throat all of her life. So, shortly after our marriage we returned to Los Angeles and went to see a throat specialist, Dr. Robert Feder. He determined her sore throats were coming from her tonsils, and scheduled an operation.

Early the next morning we drove over to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and Dr. Feder took out her tonsils. While she was recuperating, I got a bad case of the flu. Not exactly a honeymoon of the rich and famous.

My illness was strange. As I got better, the symptoms of influenza were replaced by pain–terrible, searing pain that ricocheted through my entire body. Cindi and I joked about our invalid status and settled in that Saturday to watch the Kentucky Derby on television.

But after the race, when I stood up and took a few steps, I pitched headlong into a nightmare. I was overcome by pain so encompassing that I couldn’t feel my feet. I had no control over them, and fell to the floor in agony.

We couldn’t reach any of our doctors that weekend. Yet I was so desperate for relief from the pain that I took some of the codeine prescribed for Cindi for her throat. It barely made a difference.

On Monday my doctor met us at a local hospital. There a roomful of doctors attempted to find out what was wrong. For four days they hadn’t a clue. Finally they did a spinal tap. When the results came in, one mystery was solved.

I had Guillain-Barré syndrome, a rare form of nerve inflammation. It’s thought to be caused by an allergic reaction to a viral infection, such as the flu. The nerves become inflamed and begin to send erroneous and scrambled messages to the brain.

In some people it causes little pain but extensive paralysis; in cases such as mine, it causes little paralysis but intense pain.

There are no drugs or surgery to treat Guillain-Barré–so the doctor sent me home. “There is nothing we can do,” he said. “You’ve got to ride it out. I’ll prescribe some pain medication, but use as little as possible. Come back in a week.”

The following week he said the same thing. And the week after that.

By my next visit I was desperate. If anything, the agony was intensifying. Cindi tried not to let me see her fear, but my physical condition was deteriorating noticeably.

Up to that point we had seen every doctor and specialist I had ever known. Nothing was helping, and the pain had become so consuming that there was nothing else in my life.

Then an old friend, Leonard Rosengarten, a psychiatrist, asked if he could come visit. I didn’t want a friend to see how bad off I was, so I took my most potent pain medication just before he arrived.

A handsome, white-haired fellow, Dr. Rosengarten had nearly died from cancer of the esophagus, so he knew a thing or two about pain. He pulled up a chair and sat … and sat. He waited until the pain medication wore off and I could no longer hide my agony. Then he went to Cindi.

“I know Andy,” he said. “He’s a stoic if there ever was one. So if he says he’s in this much pain, I know he is. Would you mind if I got involved?”

The next morning, true to his word, Dr. Rosengarten got me into Northridge Hospital Medical Center in Northridge, Calif. I was admitted onto an entire floor of people fighting their way back from auto accidents, strokes, Guillain-Barré. Here, the specialty was therapy and pain management.

I’ll never forget that day. The doctor assigned to my case brought along a medication specialist. The first thing the doctor said was, “We know you’re in impossible pain. We’re here to help you through it.”

At those words, Cindi said she saw my body relax. Just to have the severity of my condition acknowledged was the first step on my journey to wellness. The druggist was there to start me on as much medication as I needed, but then I would be weaned off it as I learned to handle the pain in other ways.

The doctors at Northridge Hospital knew that treating pain meant treating the whole person, not just the body. Every day we had classes in biofeedback, which taught us how to use our minds to help control pain.

For example, imagining the pain coursing down through your body and out through your toes actually releases endorphins that physically fight pain. But even though my pain was gradually diminishing, my foot still felt lifeless. It was slow going as I shuffled around.

State of mind is crucial, we were taught. Consequently, we patients were all pulling for one another. I’ll never forget looking into the dayroom one Saturday and seeing a group of stroke patients in a semicircle, with a therapist behind each of them.

The patients were passing a ball from one to another. Each time one successfully maneuvered the ball to the person seated next to him, all the therapists cheered wholeheartedly. There wasn’t a bored or blasé staff member among them.

It was one of the sweetest and most wonderful scenes I had ever seen.

One day the therapist working on me saw one of my toes move. The whole hospital heard about it. Patient after patient and doctor after nurse stopped by my door and said, “We heard the great news! Congratulations!” I was on the mend.

So instead of lying at home, isolated, with nothing to do but dwell on the pain, I was suddenly busy, part of a team, pulling not only for myself but for the others on my floor as well.

By the time I left the hospital a month later, I was taking 85 percent less medication than when I arrived. The pain wasn’t as severe, and I was equipped to handle it.

Although I was no longer in the acute phase of my illness, we weren’t out of the woods yet. It took me nearly a year to recuperate to the point where I could participate in everyday activities. And it was a rough year.

My former manager told Cindi and me that we were virtually broke. We thought life would be easier back in my home state of North Carolina, so we put our Los Angeles house up for sale. But the real estate market was bad, and not one good offer was forthcoming.

As I fought my way back from Guillain-Barré, I never stopped thanking God for the help he had provided me through Dr. Rosengarten, but especially through Cindi. Yet I couldn’t help but feel bad. She had married me for better or worse and all she had got was the worse.

At the end of that year, I sat in our unsold house with no bank account to speak of and no work in sight. Not only was I old by Hollywood standards, but I had also been out of the game for a year. That alone is hard to overcome.

I was getting physically stronger, but I was so depressed. We couldn’t sell the house–I didn’t know what to do.

Then Cindi came up with an off-the-wall idea. “Maybe it’s a good thing we couldn’t sell the house,” she said. “Maybe it was God showing us grace. If we moved to North Carolina now you might indeed never work again. What we need to do is stay here and stoke the fire.”

That day, and every day for quite a while, Cindi and I went over to The William Morris Agency at lunchtime and sat in the lobby. My agent and every agent in the building saw us. Everybody talked to us, invited us to their offices, some to lunch.

The upshot of it was I got roles in four TV movies that year, including Return to Mayberry with Don Knotts and Ron Howard, and the pilot for Matlock–a show that ended up running for nine years!

During this period Cindi decided to give up pursuing her own acting career and work with me on mine. I don’t know how I would have made it without her.

That was more than a decade ago. Now, though Matlock is over, I have a new feature film, and I’ve recorded an album of my favorite gospel songs. Ageism hasn’t left Hollywood, but I hope I’ll continue to work.

Guillain-Barré has left me with permanent pain in both feet, but like an unwelcome guest, it isn’t so bad when I stop paying attention to it.

Challenges and pain will continue all my life, I know, but with Cindi at my side to remind me to accept God’s grace, I’ll go forward and continue to work with love and happiness.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Guided by Heaven’s Hand to Make a Difference

I published an article in Guideposts magazine a little over six years ago: Sarah’s Story, about a troubled eleventh grader in the English class I taught at a vocational high school in Duluth, Minnesota. Sarah was one of the angriest students I had ever taught. But I knew that her anger was simply a defense she’d built up against her deeper feelings of fear and hurt.

Sarah had grown up in an abusive home and had then lived on the streets before entering foster care. Even then she remained disruptive and confrontational—with her fellow students and especially with me, whom she saw as just another authority figure who couldn’t be trusted. She seemed to have no interest in her future.

I was at a loss. I was proud of my teaching, but I didn’t know if I’d ever be able to reach Sarah. Lord, I’d prayed, help me find the key to Sarah’s heart.

Then one day I stumbled onto something that I hoped would grab her attention, a Northern Minnesota writing contest. “You gonna learn me how to win that contest?” she asked me, curiosity instead of challenge in her green eyes for once. It was one of the few full sentences I had heard her speak, and perhaps the most civil.

With a lot of hard work and heartbreaking honesty, Sarah produced a story. Incredibly, it won third place. I was so proud of her that I wrote my own story about Sarah and sent it to Guideposts magazine.

They published my article. But I never dreamed that it would get such a huge response. One e-mail even came all the way from China! People shared their own difficulties, and their thankfulness for the reminder that God answers prayer and is with us even in the depths of our struggles.

But overwhelmingly, they all asked the same question: Whatever happened to Sarah? It was a question I often asked myself.

Sarah was beaming that day she accepted her prize and read her story at the awards luncheon. She looked like a new person: showered, dressed appropriately, polite and gracious as she basked in the spotlight.

But young people who have a history of pain and failure, abuse and neglect don’t simply get over it. The damage is just too severe. Sarah eventually dropped out of high school.

Last I heard, she had gone back to life on the streets. I couldn’t find her, and it broke my heart.

“I know that God is still looking out for her,” I wrote in response to all of the kind messages about Sarah. “He is there for us in our darkest hours. The one thing we all can do for her is pray.”

I believed the words I wrote because my own life was proof. My first marriage had ended in divorce, and I fully expected to be alone for the rest of my life, if that’s how it worked out. Instead, I met Ernie, a handsome construction supervisor helping to remodel a school where I was teaching.

Ernie and I had 12 happy years of marriage. I often used him as an example in class when discussing healthy relationships, including the classes Sarah attended. I had a whole section on how couples relate and communicate, and he was my model husband.

Then, on his seventy-first birthday, Ernie was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer. He wasn’t a smoker; he always exercised. We were devastated. “The disease is very advanced,” the doctor informed us. “We’ll begin chemotherapy right away, but it may be too late for it to do much good.”

I took off most of the second semester of school to stay by Ernie’s side. Several times a week, I drove him 45 minutes to the chemotherapy clinic in Duluth, for treatments that lasted eight to 10 hours. Ernie bore it all so stoically, so bravely, but he was losing the fight. I saw it in his face, increasingly pale and gaunt.

It seemed that he was hanging on only for my sake. He knew I wasn’t ready to let him go. Would I ever be?

Lord, I said over and over, what will I do without Ernie?

After seven months, Ernie finally broke down. “Oh, Lou, my dear Lou, I don’t want to leave you,” he said one morning, voice trembling. He sobbed in my arms. I held him tight. Where was God now? How could he ever expect me to get through this?

That day I sat in the waiting room of the clinic, trying to read the book I’d brought. Yet all I could think about was a future without Ernie.

My gaze drifted up from my book. A slim young woman, holding a beautiful little boy by the hand, stood in front of me, beaming.

“Mrs. Zywicki?” she asked.

“Yes?” I said, startled.

“I was in your English class,” the woman said. “I won the short story contest. It’s me, Sarah.”

The hair was longer and brushed out, her skin was clear, her clothes new and clean, but those striking green eyes were the same that had challenged me so often. I lept to my feet and threw my arms around her. “Of course! Sarah! What happened to you?” I asked.

“I had a hard time for a while, but I got my GED and went to college. I’m a med tech here in the lab and just came in to get my paycheck.”

Joy overwhelmed me. I grabbed Sarah’s hands and jumped up and down.

“And this is my little boy, Mrs. Z.”

Her boy smiled shyly as Sarah studied me. “Are you okay? Why are you here?” she asked.

“My husband has cancer,” I said. “It’s bad. I’m waiting for him.”

Sarah and I sat down. Now she put her arms around me. “Oh, Mrs. Z. I’m so sorry,” she said. “I’ve always been so grateful to you…and Mr. Z.”

Ernie and me? “I don’t understand,” I said. Sarah had never even met Ernie.

“I may not have looked like it, but I was hanging on every word you taught us about good relationships. When you told us about Mr. Z, I knew I wanted a relationship like that some day, and I knew if I wanted to find a good man I had to get myself together. You taught me that I deserved better from life than what I was getting.”

I thought about all those times in class, talking about my relationship with Ernie as an example of how to treat someone with love, kindness and respect. I had gotten through to Sarah more than I ever thought.

We sat for a while holding hands and talking. She told me about her work, her little boy and her husband. “He’s a good man, Mrs. Z.,” she said.

We were interrupted by a nurse touching my shoulder. “Mrs. Zywicki, the doctor would like to see you now.”

Sarah and I hugged once more. “I’m so glad I ran into you today,” she said.

“Me too,” I said.

“I just needed to say thanks. You made a difference.”

Ernie was waiting for me in the doctor’s office. His lab tests had come back, and they weren’t good. Heading home, he was in a lot of pain. I told him about running into Sarah. “I always wondered what happened to her,” he said. He smiled when I mentioned what Sarah had said.

Four days later, Ernie passed away. The grief was paralyzing—it felt like I was plummeting down a deep, dark hole, with no bottom in sight.

In my darkest hours, I thought back to that moment in the waiting room. Seeing Sarah, her little boy. Learning how her life had turned around. Because of you and Mr. Z, she told me.

Because of God, I thought. He’d shown me the way to reach a hopeless child, without a future.

Lord, I prayed, I trust you to help me go on, to find a future without Ernie.

God couldn’t remove this pain. But he had put Sarah there at that very moment for a reason. To comfort and reassure me.

Last year, I married again, to a wonderful man who had also lost his spouse to cancer. I know that moving on is what Ernie would have wanted for me. It’s what God wanted for me too. And in a sense, it was Sarah who led the way.

Download your FREE ebook, The Power of Hope: 7 Inspirational Stories of People Rediscovering Faith, Hope and Love

God Wants You to Be Happy

I met Dr. Peale late in his life and early in my tenure at Guideposts. He had traveled to the city from his idyllic farmhouse in Pawling, New York, to give a talk for the Dutch Treat Club, a conclave of prominent writers and thinkers to which he belonged and who met periodically at Sardi’s, a famous restaurant in the heart of the theater district. But first he stopped by the magazine’s offices to visit Van Varner, the editor-in-chief who had recently hired me. Van wanted to introduce Dr. Peale to his newest employee.

It was a brisk day with a bright winter’s sun streaming through the twenty-third floor offices. I was more curious than nervous to meet the great man, and I’d made certain to wear a respectable suit and tie. I also brought along my wife Julee’s copy of The Power of Positive Thinking and was going to ask him to sign it for her.

Community Newsletter

Get More Inspiration Delivered to Your Inbox



My first startled impression upon laying eyes on him was that he was awfully old, well into his eighties, and seemed older, moving slowly and appearing distracted and even a bit irritated at times. Van introduced me and he was gracious, his eyes lighting up a bit with surprise, and happy to sign the book for Julee. For some reason he handed the book back to Van. He asked me where I was from and when I said Michigan, he said we were practically neighbors. He was born and raised in Ohio.

Our time together was not done, however. Van asked me to join them at the luncheon. He said he wanted me to see Dr. Peale speak. I suspected, though, that someone of much greater stature within Guideposts had bailed out and I was being used to fill the table—luncheon fodder, if you will. Still, the first rule of the young and impoverished editor is never turn down a free meal.

We moved at a slug’s pace through the clog of crosstown traffic, Dr. Peale staring glumly out the window…Occasionally he muttered something to Van or one of the other men, and then checked his watch. I grew very uncomfortable.

Things did not improve at the luncheon, which was held in a private room on the second floor. Dr. Peale barely touched his food and said hardly anything, except to the many admirers who stopped by and to whom he was unfailingly warm, even the ones I didn’t think he actually recognized. Then he would sink back into what I took to be a kind of silent despair.

The moment I dreaded arrived as dessert and coffee were being served with much clatter and chatter. It was time for Dr. Peale to speak. He was introduced by the celebrated futurist and writer Isaac Asimov as among the most influential men of the century, one of the innovative and dynamic thinkers of our time. This cannot be happening to this poor soul, I thought, sinking down in my chair.

Dr. Peale rose with the applause and made his way to the podium, haltingly at first. But on that short journey of thirty feet or so, I saw something absolutely astonishing. As he neared the speaker’s platform, he appeared to undergo a physical transformation. He drew himself up and at once his whole being seemed imbued with a manifest enthusiasm, an energy that engulfed the room.

“How is everyone today?” he asked in a voice that boomed like a cannon shot. “Are you as glad to be alive as I am?”

Dr. Peale spoke for about twenty-five minutes. His mastery of his material and of the crowd was unmatched by anything I had ever seen in a speaker. He was funny—very funny—humble, comically self-effacing when he slipped up (which wasn’t always by accident, I suspected), a vivid storyteller, utterly confident and relaxed, totally on top of his game and on completely equal footing with his esteemed audience. Even the busboys stopped and listened. No one dared to tell them not to.

“People can change!” Dr. Peale boomed, clenching his fist as he said it. If they faced their difficulties with a reliance on God and a positive attitude, any problem could be overcome, any obstacle would fall before them. They could find joy and happiness if only they believed they could, and believed that was God’s desire for them.

It wasn’t exactly a speech; it certainly wasn’t a sermon—at least, not like any sermon I had heard. It was a call to personal action, a glorious exhortation, delivered with an utter certainty in the miraculous power of humans to change their lives, to grow and find the happiness and freedom to which they were divinely entitled. This was not fire and brimstone. It was bricks and mortar, steel and glass, sky and earth. It was inspiring and practical all at once. It said, If I can do it, you can do it too.

The crowd leaped to its feet when he was finished. Except for me. I was too flabbergasted to move. I just sat there knowing I had heard the greatest and most inspiring public speaker of the age…

God’s Grace and Mercy Follow Me

I stood on the patio and watched my son and his puppy play in the yard. As I witnessed the sweet display of love and devotion, I was moved to think of the presence of God in our daily lives. God’s grace and mercy follow us wherever we go.

Nine-year old Gabriel ran across the yard and grabbed the yellow rings that hang from our playset. He swung back and forth, and Rugby stretched out on the grass. Gabriel rushed to the trampoline and took a few jumps. Rugby rested underneath. Gabriel went to the yard swing that sits under the breadth of our sprawling maple. Rugby jumped up and curled beside Gabriel. Right on the cushion.

Rugby loves his family. I’ve heard it said that Labrador retrievers are velcro-dogs. They stick with their people. It’s dear that as we move around our home, Rugby is there, following along, making us smile with his devotion.

What a comforting truth, an overwhelming consideration, to know that the God’s grace and mercy follow us, too!

And grace and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life and I shall live in the house of the Lord forever. (Psalm 23:6)

Grace and mercy following me–this passage brings peace. Circumstances may be tough. Life situations may not be what we want. Some roads that stretch ahead are not what we would have chosen to travel. But the Lord is there bringing grace and mercy!

We don’t always know what that grace and mercy will look like, but we can trust that it will be sufficient. Sustaining. It will always be enough.

Claiming God’s ever-present grace and mercy can free me from worry. It can break bonds of fear.

Our 23-year old son, Logan, is preparing to move from our home again. He’ll study law at the University of Iowa. We’re packing boxes, loading his car. There’s a new place to live and a new course of study and a new life waiting for him. It’s easier to let our children grow and move on when we have the confidence that God’s grace and mercy will follow them. Wherever they go.

Gabriel and Rugby sat on the swing for a few minutes before young-male energy kicked in and they, together, bolted across the still-green late summer grass.

I had things to do, but I stood for just a moment longer.

God’s grace and mercy following His children.

I couldn’t imagine anything more peace-giving or precious.

God’s Grace—and a Banjo—Made This Marine Veteran Whole Again

I pulled a piece of curly maple from a stack at the specialty wood shop. I checked its color, its grain, its sturdiness. This would be the neck of the banjo I was building. It needed to be exactly right. To feel right in my hands, right from the start.

I’d built dozens of banjos over the years, but this one was different. You could say my life’s story would be in this banjo. A lifetime of mistakes, self-destruction and redemption. I wanted this banjo to tell that story, to share my truth, every time it was played.

At last I found the perfect piece. I loaded it into my truck and headed for my workshop at home.

* * *

I grew up outside Washington, D.C., not far from where I now live in Virginia. It wasn’t a happy childhood. My dad was a quiet man, a hard worker. But when he drank, he became mean.

I was terrified of ending up like him. As soon as I was old enough, I joined the Marines. The Vietnam War was on, and I landed in the middle of it.

My tour lasted 13 months. I came home haunted by what I’d seen over there. Haunted too by a question: Why did I make it back when so many of my friends didn’t?

I hadn’t realized how strongly public opinion had turned against the war. The first time I went out wearing my uniform, I was taunted and spat on. In the eyes of some people, I was a monster, a killer.

I didn’t know what to think. I had served my country. But I’d also witnessed horrific suffering. Death and destruction. I put my Marine uniform away. I would try to forget all about Vietnam and just move on with my life.

* * *

I unloaded the piece of curly maple from my truck and took it to the workshop I’d built behind my house. I set it on a band saw and cut it into the right shape, inhaling the sweet scent of the wood. I sanded it smooth and added a tinted finish, bringing out the rippled pattern in the grain.

* * *

I worked odd jobs after the war—gas station attendant, electric company technician. I’d gotten married just before the war, and we had two daughters. I wanted a quiet, normal life.

Then my wife got in a car accident; the man I’d become after Vietnam was no good at caregiving. We eventually divorced. I left my family and barely stayed in touch with my daughters.

I found work as an auto mechanic in Annandale, Virginia. One day at lunch, the shop foreman pulled a fiddle from a case and another worker got out a guitar.

“Do you play anything?” the foreman asked me.

“No,” I said. I loved music but had never learned an instrument.

“We could use a banjo,” said the foreman.

The two of them struck up a tune, and something happened inside me. The anguish I’d carried from Vietnam eased. The music was like a salve. I watched and listened, hypnotized by their finger work. Everything went away except the music.

I bought a cheap banjo and taught myself to play. To my delight, music seemed to come naturally. Soon I was playing with the guys at the shop and any chance I got at home.

Our little group got some gigs at bars. We’d play, then stay to drink. Music and booze—what a combination! It blotted out my war memories and my guilt, how I’d treated my family, feelings that boiled right up when the music stopped.

I looked forward to those gigs. In between, I drank alone at home. I’d become just like my dad.

* * *

Once the neck of the banjo was complete, I ordered the metal parts from a supplier I trusted in Europe—the tone ring, tension hoop, brackets, tail pieces and tuners. I affixed them to an intact banjo head I’d found online. The only thing left to do was to put everything together, attaching the strings and adding decorative insignia to the head and neck.

* * *

For years, my life zigzagged between drunkenness and fitful attempts to start over. I drifted away from the auto shop and the band and stowed my banjo in a closet. I worked construction, remarried, bought some land in Maryland and built a house.

My second wife, Sandi, urged me to join the VFW. She thought talking with other veterans might help. I went to a couple meetings, but hearing other guys talk just brought up the painful memories I’d tried to bury. I came home wanting to get drunk.

Sandi was patient and loving, but she grew dismayed when I relapsed after a rehab program. We separated, and I cursed myself for having ruined another marriage.

I lost my job during the 2008 recession. I drank even more and developed liver disease.

“You have to stop drinking, Don,” my doctor said. “You have Stage III cirrhosis. You’re going to die.”

I drank anyway.

One day, I stumbled out of my stupor long enough to discover a notice of imminent foreclosure in the mail. I was practically broke and had stopped making house payments.

Desperate, I called my older daughter, Dawn. She was grown now, working in real estate. She wasn’t happy to hear from me—we barely talked. But she agreed to help me out of daughterly duty.

“We’ll sell your house before it forecloses and use the money to buy something smaller,” she said. I felt ashamed.

We went together to look at one of those smaller houses. Dawn walked inside, but I stopped on the porch.

“You go on in without me,” I said. “I need a minute.”

I was so sick, just getting out of the car had exhausted me. I stood there feeling utterly defeated. No money. Twice divorced. Estranged from my kids. About to lose the house I’d built myself. Dawn had been buying me food. Even now, all I could think about was my next drink.

There was only one word to describe me: failure.

“God,” I whispered, “please help me.”

Why did I say that? I wasn’t a praying man. Yet at that moment, those words felt like my only lifeline, a crease of light in a door that was about to close forever.

I can’t explain what happened next. It was like that moment when the guys played in the auto shop except on a whole different scale. All of the hatred and disgust I’d felt with myself just melted away. It was quite literally a physical sensation of release, a collapse of all my defenses. I felt vulnerable yet protected.

God didn’t excuse what I’d done. He let me know he loved me nonetheless, maybe even more for my brokenness, and forgave me. Unconditionally, so I could forgive myself. I had no choice but to accept that love, that grace. It filled up all the painful places I used to try to drown with alcohol. I felt staggered by a sense of relief. I wept.

“Dad?” Dawn said. “Are you okay? Do you need a drink?”

I was startled to hear myself say, “No.”

* * *

The banjo head arrived. I used my lathe to cut a wooden rim for it, then attached it to the neck. All that remained was the pearl inlay insignia. I’d sent a design to a man I knew in Kentucky. This design was special. It would set this banjo apart from every other one I’d made.

* * *

After that day on the porch, my life unfolded in what I can only describe as a series of miracles. No longer poisoned by alcohol, my liver healed. I bought a small house in Virginia and found work in construction. For the first time since Vietnam, I allowed myself to ask why I’d survived.

In other words, what should I do with this life God had given to me?

The answer came in the form of a memory. My old banjo. I found it in the closet. I tuned it but hesitated before picking and strumming. Would I remember? I tried a few chords. I could still play!

But where? Not bars. I needed a different kind of place.

Just a few days later, I was on the phone with a friend when he mentioned a church gospel group that needed a banjo player.

“Well, I’m a banjo player who’s been praying for a gospel group,” I said.

I started playing at the church every Sunday. Standing in front of that congregation, making beautiful music for God, I felt as if I’d come home.

It wasn’t long before I was making my own banjos. I wanted a life filled with music.

* * *

The pearl inlay design arrived. I pulled it out of the box.

The inlay consisted of four words, United States Marine Corps, alongside the eagle, globe and anchor of the Marine emblem, which I layered onto the head of the banjo, and a few smaller pieces representing Marine ranks that I used to decorate the neck. This banjo was a tribute to the Marines. A symbol of my intention to embrace my time in the service. I planned to play it at an upcoming Veterans Day: A Time for Gratitude picnic. I was pretty nervous about this particular debut.

I arrived at the picnic and made my way through a crowd of vets and their families to a stage where I would join a volunteer band. I knew what would happen next. People would want to see the banjo. They’d want to talk, to share their memories.

The banjo would make it impossible for me to duck out.

We played a set, and the audience applauded. Afterward people came up to get a closer look at the banjo.

“It’s beautiful,” said one of the folks standing near me. “Where’d you get it?”

“Made it myself.”

Soon I was surrounded. The banjo opened up conversations, honest talk about war. My conflicted feelings about Vietnam turned out to be not so uncommon. War leaves no one unscarred. We are broken by war but made whole by grace.

“Can I take a photo of your banjo?” a woman asked. “It’s for my husband. He’s a Marine in Afghanistan. It will make him so happy to see this.”

Him and me both.

After the picnic, I climbed into my truck and headed home. The banjo lay on the seat beside me. It was the truth teller I had hoped it would be. And at last, so was I.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

God’s Comfort in the Midst of Despair

I pushed against the back door of our house again, hard. No luck. It wouldn’t budge. The humidity from the flood had swollen the wood. My husband, Vince, had gone in through the front. As I waited, I told myself, Maybe it won’t be that bad. It was half hope and half prayer. Something told me, though, it was going to be bad. Real bad.

Two days earlier, on August 28, we’d evacuated Schoharie, our village of 1,000 in central New York, fleeing Hurricane Irene, which had swept up the East Coast, transforming streams into raging rivers.

The village was like a war zone. Shops wrecked, houses crumpled, nearly every one owned by someone we knew. Lampposts uprooted. An oil tank lay on its side. Debris everywhere.

Still I hoped we’d been spared. We didn’t live in the flood plain. The Schoharie Creek, usually a gentle, flowing stream, runs three-quarters of a mile from us. The last flood, in ’96, left a foot of water in our basement. That we could deal with.

“Let me get that for you,” a voice said. My neighbor. He came up the steps, turned the knob and threw his weight into the door. It opened.

I stepped through the doorway and froze. This can’t be my kitchen! My eyes darted from the floor to the countertops. Everything covered with a rank brown ooze. My legs buckled. I grabbed for the door, steadied myself. Covering my mouth and nose, I walked inside. My sneakers slipped in the muck.

What happened to the fridge? I spotted it, leaning over, blocking the way into the dining room. Vince peeked over the top of it. He was ashen.

“We lost everything on the first floor,” he said. “The water must’ve been at least five feet deep here.” Vince pushed the refrigerator over with his foot. It landed with a thud.

“Everything?” I said. I stared blankly around the room in…what was it? Shock? Utter disbelief?

“There’s mud everywhere,” he said. “My organ’s ruined, all my sheet music, your sewing machines, the fabric, your quilting books…”

“But…” It just didn’t seem possible. This house had stood since the 1850s. We had bought it not long after we married and we built our lives here—raised our daughters, Jenny and Stephanie, filled the place with memories.

I felt sick. Vince is the organist at church, his reed organ in the living room a treasured antique. I loved listening to him play while I quilted. All the things I’d collected over the years—the handcrafted wooden baskets, the beautiful felt angels in the corner cabinet, my autographed children’s books from teaching first grade.

We’d never be able to replace them. We didn’t have flood insurance. We lived simply on our teachers’ pensions—Vince had taught elementary school band and choir—and Social Security.

“What are we going to do?” I asked.

“We’ll start over,” Vince said. I wondered if he believed it. Did I?

This wasn’t how I’d imagined our retirement, with next to nothing to call our own.

“You work on emptying the kitchen and I’ll start in the living room,” Vincesaid. “I don’t want you coming out here. It’s too dangerous.”

By late afternoon the back deck was piled with plates and glasses, crockery, my mixer and waffle iron (the wiring ruined by the water), baking tins, table and chairs, garbage bags stuffed with food from the fridge. It was nearly dark when we finished, right before the 8:00 P.M. public safety curfew.

It had taken hours just to scrape up the muck. We’d barely made a dent. Lord, I wondered, how can we ever start over? We’ve lost so much!

We were staying at Stephanie’s an hour away. Driving out of town I gazed into the darkness, not a light anywhere.

The next day we returned. At the threshold I willed myself inside. I stared at the living room walls, covered with black dots. Mold. It seemed to grow before my eyes. Vince just shook his head, his face cloaked in sadness.

I busied myself in the sewing room, carrying load after load of soggy fabric to the curb. I had just picked up an armful of sodden pattern books when a woman walked up. She lived in a neighboring town and I hadn’t seen her in years. “Sue, you were the first person I thought of,” she said. “Tell me what I can do.”

For a moment I was speechless. “Thank you,” I said. I gave her a careful hug. I didn’t want to transfer any gunk. “Everything has to go. We’re piling it outside.” Once we emptied the house, maybe I’d be able to make sense of it all. Things had to get better. Didn’t they?

We were carrying out one of my sewing machines when a man showed up I’d never seen before, followed by a young couple. How had they come upon us? About noon there was a knock on the door—two women, also strangers.

“We have sandwiches, and a case of water,” one said. “Also, I wanted to let you know they’re setting up a free café behind the DAR hall.” Their help was a godsend, but as the afternoon wore on it dawned on me: They wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t really bad. Would our town survive?

Day after day Vince and I worked on our house with help from friends and family. But each day our hopes dwindled more. The mold meant gutting the house, not work we could do ourselves. But hiring someone to rehab the house would cost upwards of one hundred thousand dollars. We’d lost all our equity. No way to take out a loan.

For lunch we went to the community café, the tables filled with a bounty of home-cooked meals and dishes donated from area restaurants and supermarkets. Everyone was in the same boat.

There were times Vince and I barely spoke on the hour-long drive to Stephanie’s. We were too exhausted and demoralized. Even going to church didn’t offer the comfort I’d always found there. The sanctuary had flooded, the wood flooring destroyed, mold spreading across the walls. The organ was damaged too, but Vince got it to play.

“God is at work even now,” our pastor assured the congregation. I wanted to believe that! But what exactly was God doing?

One night the whole family, Jenny and Stephanie, their husbands, A.J. and Aaron, gathered in Stephanie’s living room. Aaron spoke first: “I don’t see any option but to sell the house for what you can and get a new place.”

I couldn’t believe my ears. The house was the one thing we hadn’t lost! Where would we move? And what bank would give a mortgage to a retired couple on a fixed income with few assets?

Everyone nodded in agreement—except Vince. He looked stunned. For a moment the room was silent. “You’ve given us a lot to think about,” he said.

That night worry and doubt pervaded my dreams. I awoke, my hands clenching the covers. Dear God, please help me to let go, to trust in you. To believe in a future.

A few days later a former colleague of Vince’s came by the house. “I posted a note about what you’re going through on Facebook,” he said. “I’ve heard from so many former students. They wanted me to give you this donation.” Inside the envelope was a check for one thousand dollars. We soon received an additional four thousand dollars.

Then, two weeks after the flood more than 20 people from Jenny’s church two hours south of us arrived to help gut the house, pulling out everything except for the floor and the framing.

Vince and I spent the day cleaning out the garage and his workshop, glad to leave the work to people younger and stronger. Truthfully, I couldn’t bear the thought of seeing our home stripped to its bones.

Late that afternoon Jenny came out to the garage. “We’re done,” she said. “Take a look.” I followed her and Vince back inside, the moment I’d dreaded. I walked into the kitchen. The walls, the cabinets, the built-in shelves, my sewing room, were gone. Just a big, empty space. I could see clear to the front walls.

I felt more relief than sorrow. This house no longer felt like our home. It was time to let go. “What do you think?” Jenny asked.

I paused for a moment. I’d lost so much in the flood, but what mattered most—the love of my family, the support of friends old and new, the spirit of community—was stronger, more alive than ever. I felt a stirring in my heart, my sense of hope rekindled. That’s what I needed to hold on to.

In the distance I could hear the rumble of power tools. It sounded almost like a heartbeat, the village slowly, haltingly returning to life. “You—everyone—have been such a blessing,” I said. “I don’t know what’s next. But we’re going to be okay.”

In January we bought a house outside Schoharie, on higher ground. It’s smaller than our old place, perfect for a retired couple. The village remains a work in progress, a patchwork of houses for sale and people rehabbing their homes. It’s a slow, sometimes painful, process. But there’s a spirit that grows stronger.

For months the community café has served lunch daily, fueled by a supply of food that never dwindled, brought by people who felt called to help. Volunteers still come. Some weekends they’ve nearly doubled the population of Schoharie. God at work even in the midst of chaos and despair. Especially then. And thanks to that I know we’ll be okay.

Download your FREE ebook, The Power of Hope: 7 Inspirational Stories of People Rediscovering Faith, Hope and Love

God Led Her to a Career of Caring for Seniors

I arrived at the Edgewood Centre, just over the state line in New Hampshire, at 9 a.m. sharp. It was my first day at the senior care facility as a licensed nursing assistant (or LNA) trainee. I had no idea what to expect. “Good morning, Allie,” the human resources director said. “You’ll be reporting to the south wing.” I tried to act unfazed, but I think I gasped.

The south wing. That was the dementia ward.

I had seen the residents who had Alzheimer’s. Their vacant expressions. Their stiffness. I’d heard they could be unpredictable, aggressive—mean even. I didn’t think I could connect with any of them. And if I couldn’t connect with them, how could I take good care of them?

I forced a smile. “Great,” I said to the HR director.

But I was scared to death. As I walked down the hall to the south wing, all I could think was, I miss my old life.

For 30 years, I had been a child-care professional, and I loved it. Toddlers were my specialty. Their inquisitive nature, their cuddliness, the fact that they are learning something new all the time. The terrible twos? That didn’t scare me. I could get down to their level and deal with any tantrum. I’d never wanted to do anything else.

Then came Covid.

I had been working at the child-care center at Edgewood, where we watched the kids of the staff members. Though I had been there for only a couple of months, I felt right at home. I had just figured out how to rearrange the toddler room to run more smoothly—and then the whole country went into lockdown. Edgewood had to operate with fewer staff, which meant fewer kids for me to look after. By the end of April, the child-care center shut down.

I went on unemployment. I wasn’t sure what I was going to do.

Then one day in mid-May, I was tying up loose ends with Edgewood’s HR director. “You know, the state of New Hampshire has this new program,” she said. “They’ll help you get your LNA degree, and you can start working in our assisted living facility almost immediately.”

That got my interest. I’d brought the toddlers to visit with the residents, and both the kids and the seniors had enjoyed the interaction. I knew there weren’t going to be openings in child care anytime soon. I couldn’t afford not to work; I had a daughter in college and a stepson in high school. Besides, I’m not the type who can sit around at home. I need to be doing something. So I signed up for a free eight-hour class.

I learned about feeding long-term-care residents, bathing them, using bedpans, changing linens. I passed a test, and the HR director put me on the schedule for the following Monday. I’d be working as what New Hampshire called a temporary health partner, doing onsite training for my LNA certification, which the facility would pay for.

That first day, I was assigned to shadow Celia, an experienced LNA. She had to feed one of the residents breakfast. The woman stared stonily ahead and refused to open her mouth. Before I knew it, the mashed bananas were tossed around the room. Like with the toddlers. Mealtime had been a mess back then too, but it was a raucous, fun mess.

I didn’t have much experience with dementia. Both of my parents had died in their sixties of cancer. I’d helped out with my mother-in-law, who had COPD. Toward the end, she’d started to forget things, and it was heartbreaking.

The feeding took 30 minutes. As Celia and I were leaving her room, the resident spoke. “Thank you,” she said. “I love you.” A small success.

We moved on to other residents and other tasks. Celia showed me how to read their charts—which outlined their habits, their dietary needs, if they wore hearing aids or glasses, their bathing schedules—and how to operate portable oxygen tanks. I was impressed when Celia effortlessly raised a cantankerous heavyset man with the machine lift. “Don’t worry, you’ll get the hang of it,” Celia told me.

The final task of the day involved helping a woman get settled in her room. I got her a glass of water and found her eyeglasses. She called me a silly pet name. Then she giggled, which got me giggling too. This isn’t so bad, I thought.

Each day I learned a little more. Toward the end of the week, I started to do more on my own. My second time hooking up someone to the toilet lift, the strap fell off suddenly. The 200-pound woman lurched backward. I ran behind her and supported her under her arms. I couldn’t reach the call bell, so I yelled for help. People came running.

One of the techs said, “Maybe she shouldn’t be doing this by herself.” The nurse said, “No, Allie’s fine. It wasn’t her fault.” Hearing that boosted my confidence.

By Friday afternoon, I was bone-tired. Being an LNA was a physical job, and my body wasn’t used to it. Before I left, I walked down the hall, peeking into each room to wave goodbye to the residents. Some of them didn’t react. But others brightened a bit, even if they didn’t really recognize me. It struck me how lonely it must feel to be trapped in a mind that was failing.

That’s when I heard a voice inside me saying, “This is where you need to be. You can make a difference here.”

There was a lot I had to get used to. Like the studying. It had been almost 30 years since I had taken a class. Talk about intimidating! I sat at my kitchen table to watch the prerecorded lectures on my computer. I’d say to myself, Just do this for an hour.

It was a struggle. I learned to ignore everything else—my husband, the laundry, the TV. After an hour, I’d get up, stretch, snack. Then I’d tell myself, One more hour. One hour at a time, I got it done.

But when I took my LNA board exams, I didn’t pass the clinicals. I was devastated. My husband, Kevin, and my 17-year-old stepson had bought me new scrubs to celebrate. They gave them to me that night anyway.

When I took the test again and passed, my daughter was home from college and the three of them decorated the house. They put sticky notes in the stairwell saying things like “Great job” and “You’ll make the best LNA.”

Kevin has been so supportive of my new career, even though all the studying meant I couldn’t watch the Sunday NASCAR races with him. (Kevin and I are such huge NASCAR fans that we got married trackside at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.) The whole family is proud of me.

I have grown to love so many of the residents. I enjoy being creative, mostly in coming up with gentle ways to say, “No, you can’t do that.” Some workers get upset or frustrated and argue with the residents. I take everything in stride, the way I used to with the toddlers.

I had one gentleman in the common area who told his daughter over the phone, “I’ve been sitting here at the car dealership for three days, waiting for my car to be fixed!” She replied, frustrated, “No, Dad, your car is here at my house. You are at Edgewood.” Hearing that upset the man, so I went over. “Sorry about the wait,” I told him. “Your car is going to be done in 10 minutes.” He settled down, satisfied.

It’s a matter of putting yourself where the residents are and thinking what they’re thinking. Everyone just wants you to acknowledge what they’re saying, how they’re feeling.

With some residents, the connection goes deeper. There’s one gentleman from Boston. He’s a Navy veteran and my dad had been in the Navy, so we clicked. His short-term memory is gone; he can’t remember what I said a minute ago. But, boy, can he tell stories about his Navy adventures! And we’ve compared notes on places we like in Boston, including our favorite Chinese restaurant.

These south wing residents used to have full lives before dementia, and I love hearing about them. Unlike toddlers, who are constantly learning something new, people with dementia are constantly losing something—an ability, a word, a memory, a bit of themselves. I try to move past their symptoms and look for the person within—the Red Sox fan, the news junkie, the Navy man.

I think my personality is suited for this job. I’m easygoing, and I just roll with things. I laugh a lot. And I’ve learned a lot too. How to be more patient, more compassionate—after all, every one of us is on our own journey of aging. It can be a lonely journey without having someone familiar by your side. Most of the residents may not remember my name, but they know who I am. They know that I care about them.

That’s why I decided to work on Christmas Day, 2020. It was the first time I had ever missed Christmas morning with my family. But we were in the middle of the Covid pandemic, and the residents couldn’t have any visitors. I wanted them to see a familiar face. Nobody in my charge seemed to register that it was Christmas, but there was a good meal and I helped the residents open presents.

Later I walked down the hall, singing “Silent Night.”

Everyone was settled in their rooms. It was quiet.

Then, from one of the rooms, I heard a small voice joining in: “All is calm, all is bright.”

This was where I was meant to be. Gratitude swept over me, gratitude for my new, God-given calling. All was calm and bright, indeed.

Read 5 Ways to Approach Alzheimer’s Caregiving Compassionately

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.