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Don’t Give Up on God

I rode home from Memphis a few weeks ago with my friend, Lori Brown. We had an awesome time talking and laughing on the 10-hour drive, catching up on family news, talking about God and the dreams on our hearts of things we’d like to do for Him.

And then as we zoomed down I-40, we noticed that traffic was slowing . . . and then it came to a complete stop. Just for the record, sitting in a parking lot on the interstate is not my idea of a fun thing. And then when Lori checked her GPS, it said that the wait would be one hour and 29 minutes. Oh my. The trip was already long enough. That certainly wasn’t the news that we wanted.

But then when she checked it again about 10 minutes later, the wait had been shortened to about 30 minutes. A third check showed an even shorter wait time.

That’s when we noticed cars start to pull across the wide grassy median. Car after car of people who were tired of waiting, heading in the opposite direction to find another route.

About a minute after they left our lane, traffic started moving again, I told Lori, “Wow, if they’d waited just another minute they would have been moving again.

And that’s when God whispered to me, “That’s exactly what happens when folks get tired of waiting for Me. They strike out on their own—but if they’d just waited a little bit more, I was ready to move and I had something so much better for them.”

Are you waiting on an answer to something you’ve prayed about? Does it seem like it’s taking forever for God to answer? I understand. In conjunction with my Just 18 Summers project, I’ve had a big dream on my heart to make a documentary and a movie that I know will make a difference in the lives of many families. The screenplay is written. The teams of filmmakers are on board for both projects. All we need is the funding. The waiting has been hard these past few years.

I’m by nature a take-charge kind of gal, and there have been so many times when I’ve been tempted to “help” God move things forward. But He keeps saying, “Wait on Me.”

So now my prayer is, “God, don’t let me move ahead of You. Give me patience to wait until You’re ready.” You see, with the beauty of hindsight, I’ve come to realize that all those times when it’s looked like God was doing nothing, He was busily at work behind the scenes. I’ve realized that if things had happened on my timetable, pieces that needed to be in place wouldn’t have happened.

Has my funding arrived yet? No. But I know that the God who put the dream on my heart will be faithful to provide everything I need to accomplish the task.

If you’re waiting on an answer from Him, don’t give up right before He moves. You’ll never regret waiting on Him . . . but you just might regret moving before He’s ready.

I remain confident of this, I will see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the living. (Psalm 27:13)

Dolly Parton’s Dreams

Y’all might not know this about me, but I read everything I can get my hands on. Self-help books, novels, biographies, religion, best sellers, anything that helps me see what makes people tick. When a friend says, “You gotta read this, Dolly, it’s a great book,” I do. You never know how it might inspire you.

That’s what happened back when I was on Porter Wagoner’s show. One of the musicians, Buck Trent, gave me this book as a birthday present by a preacher I’d never heard of. He had a long name and preached at a big church in New York City. But he knew how to talk to a country girl like me, used to Scripture on Sundays.

“Dream big, think big, pray big,” this preacher said. Lord, I thought, that’s just what I want to spend my life doing!

My earliest dreams were born in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains, just like I was. My mother was a big dreamer. She dreamed about having a houseful of kids, and talk about dreams come true, she had 12 of ’em!

Some of us might have seemed like nightmares at times, but she was great about not trying to mold us or shape us to be like anybody else. Mama wanted each of us to be who God made us. And boy, did he make me a dreamer!

I’d put a tin can on a stick for a microphone, jab one end into a crack in the porch of our cabin and sing a song that I’d made up.

All at once those weren’t our chickens listening to me out there in the yard. They were an audience full of people clapping and cheering. And that wasn’t a hand-me-down shift I was wearing; it was a silk dress aglitter with rhinestones.

Mama’s people were all musical. “Sing one of your songs,” she’d say, and I’d sing. My uncle Louis saw how serious I was about music, so he gave me a guitar, a baby Martin. Oh, I loved that guitar! I played it all the time.

I prayed my dreams. Lived and breathed ’em too. Maybe that’s why it never occurred to me they might not come true. The night I graduated from Sevier County High School, all the seniors got up and said what they wanted to do: go to college, get married, take a job in Knoxville (the closest city).

I sat there in the fancy pink dress my aunt Estelle had bought for me and waited my turn. Then I stood up and announced, “I’m gonna move to Nashville and be a big star.”

Everybody laughed. I was so embarrassed. I couldn’t understand why they laughed. Years later I realized it was because they were embarrassed. They’d never known anybody who had the gall to dream that big and declare it out loud.

Dreams are never gonna come true if you don’t put wings on ’em. Not only wings–they need feet, hands, a brain. You’ve got to work really hard to make a dream come true.

That’s the difference between a wish and a dream. You can sit around and wish for good things to happen to you, but a dream is something you have to pursue, something you make happen.

Like all country kids I knew which bugs I could play with and which ones would sting. We’d put a string on June bugs and fly them like kites or put lightning bugs in a jar for a homemade flashlight (we released them later). But butterflies were the ones I loved most.

As a little bitty child, I’d get lost chasing them into the woods. Everybody hollered at me, but I didn’t care. I’m going to be like a butterfly, I decided. Spread my wings and fly.

You’ve got to be responsible for your dreams. You’ve got to take care of them the way you take care of your children, protect them, say no to people who want to remake them their own way.

I wake up early in the morning to do my dreaming–at four o’clock, ’cause I’m not a big sleeper. I think of God as a farmer throwing out nuggets of wisdom and inspiration first thing. I get out there and pick ’em up before everyone else. In the wee hours, the world is quiet and I can really listen to God.

Because, most of all, you have to trust him with your dreams. Maybe he’s got something planned that’s even better than you expect. I thank God for all the blessings he’s given me. I ask him to take the wrong things out of my life and bring in the right things.

If my prayers are slow to be answered, I think, Well, that’s part of this prayer. God’s trying to make me work on something. If he gave us everything we wanted right when we wanted it, we’d already be in heaven and I wouldn’t be here talking to you.

You might think with all I’ve accomplished in my life–going to Nashville and becoming a big star beyond even my wildest dreams–I would rest easy. No, ma’am. As long as I can, I’m gonna keep going–writing songs, making music, going on tour, building parks, being creative.

If I can’t get up and walk, they’re gonna have to put wheels on my rocking chair so I can still rock and roll. I keep thinking big, dreaming big and praying big. Believe me, you never get too old to dream.

For instance, at Dollywood we’re building a resort where families can slow down, kick back and just enjoy being together.

It’s got a real down-home feel, with rocking chairs and straightback chairs on big white porches, where you can take in the quiet and talk to God in the morning, or gather with your loved ones and swap stories all night long. Dollywood’s DreamMore Resort, we call it.

Back to books. My love of reading is another thing I got from my mama. We didn’t have television in our cabin in the Smokies, and our radio was used only to listen to the Grand Ole Opry and the news. So Mama would sing to us and read to us from the Bible.

The stories from the Old Testament made me want to know more–and read more.

So many of my people when I was growing up didn’t get a chance at education, like my daddy, who never learned to read or write, though he was very smart. That’s why one of my dreams has been to give free books to children who need them. I created a program called Imagination Library to do just that.

It started in my hometown (Daddy was so proud that kids called me the Book Lady, even prouder than he was when I became a member of the Grand Ole Opry) and has spread all over the country. So far we’ve given out 50 million books, and we’re still going strong.

Now, about that book that inspired me all those years ago. The one by the preacher who said think big, pray big and dream big. He’s also the man who started this magazine you’re reading–Norman Vincent Peale, author of The Power of Positive Thinking.

Who would’ve guessed that a little girl who sang to the chickens in her yard and got lost in the woods chasing butterflies would one day appear on the cover of a national magazine? Why, that’s more than even I could dream up!

Watch as Dolly offers advice on pursuing your own dreams!

Download your FREE ebook, Rediscover the Power of Positive Thinking, with Norman Vincent Peale.

Do It Now (Not Later)

I handed in this article a day late. I wish I were kidding. For a few weeks I sat on the assignment, going through all the justifications that procrastinators like me keep handy: “I don’t have enough information to get started,” “I work better under pressure,” “What can I really get done in a half hour, anyway?” “I’m too tired to be productive.”

Because I hadn’t started writing when I should have, I wasn’t prepared when real obligations came up. Our dog got sick. I had to stay late at the office a couple nights. One weekend there was a homecoming party for my brother-in-law. I fell further and further behind on my article.

For a writer to tackle a story on procrastination is a cruel twist of fate. Writers are notorious procrastinators, having built careers around the adrenaline rush of deadline. But that doesn’t mean we feel better than you do about putting things off. No matter your profession, procrastination eats away at how you feel about yourself.

I sat down at my computer after I’d already missed my deadline, feeling terrible. I’ve failed yet again! I could have prevented this mad dash to the finish; why didn’t I? Then I caught myself. I needed to give myself a pep talk, not a browbeating. I decided that, having botched yet another deadline, I was officially an expert on the topic of procrastination. I put a few of the tips in this article to good use and got cracking.

Nearly everyone procrastinates, even people who seem to have their lives completely in order. We’ve all got too much to do, so some things end up sitting on our to-do lists without ever getting done. Delaying certain tasks—like taking down the holiday decorations, vacuuming the car, replacing the light bulb in the closet—is fairly harmless. Putting off others—like paying bills, finishing projects at work, going to the doctor—can have serious consequences. Procrastination at its most extreme has cost people their jobs, their savings, their health, and certainly their peace of mind.

There’s hope, though. Procrastination isn’t a deep-seated character defect. It’s a bad habit. As with smoking, overeating, biting your nails, or chronically running late, you get caught in a vicious cycle, making it harder to break free. Your inner voice says, “That’s just how I deal with stress.” But procrastination, like any bad habit, can be overcome. Especially if you don’t expect 100 percent success on the first try and are willing to stick with it.

One way to beat the procrastination bug is to take a step back from your emotions about something you haven’t finished and look at the situation calmly and thoughtfully—as if you were giving advice to a friend. Neil Fiore, Ph.D., bestselling author of The Now Habit and the new book Awaken Your Strongest Self: Break Free of Stress, Inner Conflict, and Self Sabotage says observing yourself objectively and not letting your first reaction to a looming task be your last can help you overcome the mental obstacles of procrastination.

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There are many different types of procrastinators, and there are at least as many different ways of breaking the habit, depending on your type. Some of us having a tough time getting started; others have trouble finishing. Thinking positive when procrastination strikes (or even before!) is the key to beating it.

Here are 17 techniques for getting things done when you need to:

1. Use positive self talk.
Feelings of guilt and failure make it even tougher to make progress. Try something affirmative: “I have done much harder things than this. This is well within my abilities. I will get started this morning and see how far I get.” You might want to say a prayer first.

2. Choose a new reaction.
If your first reaction is, “I can’t do it,” Fiore advises saying, “Yes, that’s one thought,” then using the word “and” as a bridge to a more productive reaction: “…and I am an organized person. I will sit down now and focus on the task.”

3. Break it down into smaller tasks and prioritize.
The tried and true to-do list! Writing down each step gives you a clear picture of what lies ahead. Prioritizing helps you make a manageable plan and prepare your brain for that crucial first step.

4. Work when you’re most motivated.
Don’t even try balancing your checkbook at night if you know you can’t keep your eyes open past 9 pm. You’ll get the most done working at the time of day when you feel your best and most alert.

5. Make a schedule, then show up and see what happens.
“You don’t have to wait to feel confident and all-knowing,” says Fiore. Set a time and place with yourself, show up, and see what transpires. This can work for any number of tasks, from completing a huge spreadsheet to writing thank-you notes. Don’t give up if you get off schedule. Just get yourself back on track.

6. Give yourself specific directions.
Fiore says long-term goals can be dangerous for procrastinating types because they leave the mind hanging in the future without instructions on how to reach that point. He suggests giving your brain and body simple instructions. Try “On Saturday morning, I will get in the car at 10 am and go to the gym for the 10:30 aerobics class” as opposed to “This winter I will get back in shape.”

7. Remove distractions.
What do you do every time you should be doing something else? Get rid of it. This might mean taking your laptop to a coffee shop, hiring a sitter so you can hole up in your office, or turning off the television you keep on for background noise. If the internet is a distraction while you’re on the computer, don’t even go online.

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8. Make a nice place to work.
A cup of tea, some fresh air through a cracked window or a soothing classical music CD can work wonders on your mood and your work-space. Proper lighting, comfy clothes, or a scented candle can help, too. Why should your work feel like drudgery.

9. Set a timer.
If you work for a predetermined stretch of time, you’ll often find you can (and want to) go even longer once you’re on a roll. Start with short bursts of time and work up to longer periods to prevent losing steam.

10. Have someone hold you to your commitment.
If you tell a friend or family member you’re going to paint the bedroom this weekend, you’re more likely to follow through. Ask the person to check in with you and provide positive reinforcement that you can do it.

11. Ask for help.
Turn to your support network. Even if they can’t write that presentation for you, maybe they can run an errand or pick up the kids after school while you’re in work mode.

12. Think progress, not perfection.
A good job is good enough. If you haven’t cleaned out the garage because you can’t afford the shelves you want, start with donating the old sports equipment and garden tools. When you get the shelves later, everything will be ready to go on them.

13. Reward yourself.
Balance work and relaxation. If your Saturday is going to be filled with errands in the morning and a few hours at the office in the afternoon, schedule lunch with a friend in between or get tickets for a movie that night.

14. Be thankful for consructive procrastination.
A friend of mine says that her college dorm room was never cleaner than when she had a paper due. At least she did something productive, even if it wasn’t what she set out to accomplish.

15. Give yourself room to goof off.
It’s tough to sit down at the computer and immediately get to work. Build in a 15-minute buffer to catch up on email or scan the news headlines or sports scores before you get down to business.

16. Be realistic.
Be honest with yourself about how long tasks take. If you get started early, you’ll have some leeway when life’s little emergencies pop up.

17. Practice, practice!
Once you find techniques that lift you out of your let-it-slide slump, keep using them. Soon you’ll build a new get-it-done habit!

Dogs on a Plane!

Some people can’t wait to retire. Some people can’t stand it.

That was me. Even though it had been 10 years since I’d sold my metal fabrication business in New York and moved down to Knoxville, Tennessee, with my wife, Diane, I still refused to call myself retired. That sounded so final. I was just 64, plenty of miles left in me. Surely God had something more in mind for me.

The problem was, I couldn’t figure out what it was. I could spend only so many hours puttering around my garden or tinkering in my garage. All the energy I used to pour into running my business had to go somewhere. For a while, flying was my outlet. There was nothing like jumping in my plane and taking off into the wild blue yonder. I loved my Cessna P-210. I’d flown that baby for 25 years, most of the time for work and these past several years strictly for fun.

But lately even flying wasn’t much fun. I was tired of $100 hamburgers. That’s pilot slang for making a short hop to a town nearby, grabbing a burger at the airport coffee shop and flying home. A hundred dollars was roughly what it cost to fly a small plane for a two-hour round-trip. Or used to cost before aviation fuel prices shot way up. “Maybe it’s time to sell the plane,” I said to Diane one night.

Diane knew I’d been at loose ends, but still she was surprised. “You love flying,” she said. “Are you sure you’re ready to give it up?” Well, no, I wasn’t 100 percent sure. So I prayed, Lord, help me find something worthwhile to do with my plane. With myself, really.

Not long after, I got a call from Debi Boies, a friend in Landrum, South Carolina. “Hey, Jon, I’ve got a strange favor to ask,” she said. “I remember you saying that pilots jump at any excuse to fly.”

I chuckled. “That we do. What’s up?”

“Bob and I heard about a badly abused dog in Florida who needs a home,” she said. “He’s a good-sized Doberman, and neither of our cars would give him enough room. Would you be willing to meet Bob in Tallahassee and fly him and the dog back here to Landrum?”

I knew Debi and Bob were active with an animal rescue group, but I didn’t know much about the work they did. I loved dogs, though—Diane and I had adopted two strays ourselves—and I told my friend I was glad to help. So far my passengers had been the two-legged kind. What would flying a dog be like?

That weekend I found out. At the Tallahassee airport, Bob lifted the dog into the backseat of my Cessna. “Jon, this is Brock,” Bob said.

I turned in my seat to get a good look at my passenger. The Doberman pinschers I’d seen before were magnificent, muscular animals. The dog fidgeting and whining in the back was scrawny, his ribs showing. His face and neck were splotched with scars. Bob told me he’d been rescued from owners who were into dog fighting. They’d used poor Brock as bait to train other dogs to fight and kill. They filed his teeth down so he couldn’t defend himself, slapped a crude tattoo on his belly. I couldn’t see that from the cockpit. What I saw were the most soulful brown eyes gazing back at me. “How could anyone treat an animal so badly?” I exclaimed. “It’s obvious he’s smart and sensitive. Just look at those eyes.”

“You got me,” Bob said. He got into the seat beside me. “But it happens more than you’d think. That’s what keeps us doing dog rescue.”

I cranked up the engine, hoping the noise wouldn’t startle the skittish Doberman. The opposite happened. He stopped whining and settled down. “Attaboy, Brock,” I said. “Nothing to be scared of. We’re taking you to a place where no one will hurt you again.” I taxied down the runway and took off. Ninety minutes later we landed at the Landrum airport. Brock had spent the whole flight lying quietly, better behaved than some human passengers. Bob got him out of the plane and led him into the terminal, where Debi was waiting.

As soon as I finished filing paperwork for our flight, I joined them. Debi was stroking Brock’s back and he was leaning into her hand, as if he knew she’d give him the loving home he deserved.

“Jon, thank you for flying our boy here,” she said. “Do you know how lucky he is?” I looked at her quizzically.

“Millions of animals are euthanized each year because shelters don’t have the space or money to keep them until homes can be found for them,” she said. “Even when people want to adopt them, they’re often hundreds—sometimes thousands—of miles away.

“Transporting them is a challenge,” she continued. “There’s a loose network of volunteers, but it usually takes several cars and drivers to relay these pets to their new homes. You can imagine how stressed out they get, being transferred from one car to another. It’s hard on the drivers too.” Debi sighed. “I wish there were a better solution.”

The whole flight back to Knoxville I kept thinking about what Debi had said. Back home, I kissed Diane hello and headed straight for my computer. I searched the internet for stories on transporting rescued animals. “Listen to this,” I said to Diane. “A New Hampshire family offered to adopt an abandoned dog in Alabama. It took 16 volunteer drivers to get him to their house.”

But like Debi had pointed out, that dog was one of the lucky ones. In many cases, there was no way to get homeless animals to people in another part of the country who wanted to adopt them.

Wait a minute…hadn’t I been praying for something worthwhile to do with my plane? There must be hundreds of pilots like me around the country itching for a good reason to fly, I thought.

I picked up the telephone. “Hey, Debi, it’s Jon,” I said. “You know animal rescue. I know aviation. There’s got to be a way we can tackle this problem together.”

We dreamed up Pilots N Paws, a website that’s an online meeting place for animal rescuers around the country and pilots willing to volunteer their time and planes. People post pet transport requests on a message board. If pilots can help, they get in touch with the rescuer directly.

Sometimes in business, you have a good idea but it just doesn’t take off (no pilot pun intended). This was different. This was about saving the lives of innocent animals. The site was up and running in March 2008, and soon dozens of recreational pilots had signed up.

We’re almost 2,000 pilots strong now. We’ve transported thousands of adoptable animals—dogs, cats, rabbits, birds, even reptiles—to their forever homes. I’ve rescued more than 500 animals myself, including one memorable mission last September. Sixty-eight volunteer pilots helped fly 171 dogs out of New Orleans, so hard hit by Hurricane Katrina and then the disastrous BP oil spill, to new homes as far away as Iowa and New Jersey.

That was my last trip as an animal rescue pilot. It’s time for me to sell my plane and give up flying. I do it happily, knowing I’m leaving Pilots N Paws in wonderful hands. But don’t call me retired just yet. I’m ready for whatever God has planned for me next.

Take a peek at our slideshow depicting the canine rescue efforts of Pilots N Paws.

Download your FREE ebook, True Inspirational Stories: 9 Real Life Stories of Hope & Faith

Divine Intervention on a Grand Scale

I pushed aside the mountain of medical bills, lab results and insurance forms, clearing a space on the kitchen table. Our family vacation to the Grand Canyon was in three days.

Before we left, I needed to take care of something. Something I’d been putting off for the past month—the annual Turnbull family Christmas card.

Every fall, I would put together the Christmas card of all Christmas cards. Not just an update on how the year had been for my husband, Gordon, and me, and our young daughters, Sydney and MacKenzie.

There was a catchy theme, my trademark wit and a fantastic photo. No cheesy holiday sweaters for us. Our card was the highlight of many a holiday mantel and I always looked forward to writing it. But I didn’t have much to smile about this year.

I sighed, staring at the blank card in front of me. How could I possibly sum up the past year? “Carolyn Diagnosed with Stage 3 Breast Cancer. Family’s Hopes Crumbling Faster Than a Stale Christmas Cookie.”

Not exactly a holiday headline. There just weren’t many cheery words to describe the turmoil we’d been through. I was diagnosed in April. I’d been careful about getting regular mammograms even though I was only 45. I didn’t want to take any chances.

My latest screening was clean. Still, when I noticed an abnormality on my right breast, I made my doctor run further tests. Something was off. I just had this feeling. A biopsy confirmed it—a malignant tumor.

A week later I underwent a radical mastectomy. My surgeon was hopeful the cancer was contained, but the pathology report revealed it had spread to four of my lymph nodes.

“I’m sorry to have to tell you this,” the surgeon said at my post-op appointment, cutting to the point as directly as she’d made the incisions on my chest, “but the average survival time for this type of cancer is three years after diagnosis.”

I squeezed Gordon’s hand. I couldn’t cry, couldn’t scream. I was numb, as if I was watching my life fall to pieces. All at once gloomy images flooded my mind. Gordon picking out a dress for me to wear at my funeral. The girls getting ready for prom without me. My garden withering. My loafers.

I needed a new pair, but why bother buying them? I’d be gone all too soon. Besides, according to my treatment plan—as aggressive as the cancer, my oncologist told me—I wouldn’t have much time to worry about fashion trends.

I thought being a local television producer had made me tough as nails, used to going nonstop, powering through problems. But chemo knocked me flat. My hair and eyebrows fell out. My nails turned black. I refused to miss work, but most days I really could’ve used a 10-hour nap. Every little step took effort.

Even worse was the spiritual malaise. I tried to stay positive, especially in front of Sydney and MacKenzie, but it felt as if all hope had drained out of me along with my energy.

One day four months into chemo, Gordon sat down beside me on the couch and waved an ivory invitation with silk ribbons. My cousin Amanda was getting married in Flagstaff, Arizona, in October.

“We could make a trip out of it,” he said. “Maybe go to the Grand Canyon?”

I’d wanted to see the Grand Canyon ever since I was a little girl, dreaming of the Wild West from my bedroom in snowy rural Maryland. My chemo was almost done, but I still had a month of radiation ahead.

How would I travel feeling like a zombie? Would I have to wear that itchy wig to the wedding? Did my family really want to take in the sights with a lethargic bald woman in tow?

Gordon said he’d checked with my oncologist. She was okay with delaying radiation if I was up for the eight-day trip. “We need this,” he said. “The kids can make up the time at school, but…”

He didn’t have to finish the sentence. This wasn’t just any vacation. It could be our last vacation together. We were a family living on borrowed time.

How do you put all that in a holiday card? I wondered, thinking of our carefree Christmas card from the year before. The four of us laughing hysterically, making goofy faces for the camera. We weren’t the same happy family anymore.

I put the blank cards away.

Three days later, we flew to Arizona. When we landed in Phoenix, Gordon surprised us by renting a flashy green convertible. “If we’re going to drive around out west, we might as well do it in style,” he said. The girls whooped. Even I got into the spirit. We danced at my cousin’s wedding, me in my wig and all. We saw the Hoover Dam, stopped at the Venetian hotel in Vegas for a gondola ride.

But nothing compared to the Grand Canyon. We arrived early and made it to the canyon rim just in time to witness spectacular sherbet colors wash across the morning sky. Like a majestic painting come to life.

“Excuse me,” I said to a nearby guide. “Can you take a photo of us?”

I couldn’t miss this moment. I didn’t care how bald and sickly I looked.

“Try not to get the glare on my head,” I joked. The girls giggled beside me. Good. I wanted them to have a happy memory to think back on. Especially after I was gone.

It was a dream trip. But reality was waiting when we got home. There was a fresh stack of bills. A big red circle on the calendar marking my first radiation appointment. A blinking message light on the answering machine that could only be from my oncologist.

I wasn’t ready to face cancer again. Not yet. I wanted to enjoy my escape a little longer. I plopped down at the kitchen table and flipped through the vacation photos I’d had developed.

When I got to the one of the four of us at the canyon rim, I caught my breath. Those mammoth rocks looked like they’d been carved by a master sculptor. God was there in all his glory—his presence was impossible to miss in the masterpiece before me. There was nothing in the world greater. Nothing.

An idea came to me. I pulled out the box of Christmas cards. I taped the photo to one and wrote a headline: “No Grander Canyon.”

Then I started on the message: “The hand that created this geological miracle works a miracle in my life every day, showing me there is nothing so grand that God can’t intervene. Not even cancer.”

How right that Christmas message turned out to be. By the following year, I was in remission. Today, 11 years later, I’m healthy, strong and cancer-free. Something I make sure to celebrate in our annual family Christmas card.

Download your FREE ebook, True Inspirational Stories: 9 Real Life Stories of Hope & Faith.

Discover the Healing Power of the 23rd Psalm

One of the best-loved chapters in the Bible is Psalm 23. Here David, a former shepherd himself, compares us humans to sheep lovingly cared for by The Good Shepherd. “The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he refreshes my soul” (verses 1-3).

The human mind, like the human body, needs refreshment and encouragement. And like the human body, a mind can be wounded. Sorrow is a wound. It cuts deeply, but sorrow is a clean wound, and will heal, unless something gets into the wound—such as bitterness, self-pity or resentment.

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Wrong is also a wound. When I deliberately do something I know is wrong, I wound my mind, and it is an unclean wound. Time will not heal that wound. Gradually, a sense of guilt will develop, and that can destroy a life. There is only one Physician who can heal this wound.

“He refreshes my soul” can have another meaning. Moffatt translates it to read, “He revives life in me.” Like a watch, the human spirit can just run down. We lose our drive and push. We become less willing to attempt the difficult. Like squeezing the juice from an orange and leaving just the pulp, life has a way of squeezing the spirit out of a person. The dawn of a new day leaves us cold and hopeless.

The Bible tells us that God made the first human being, “and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (Genesis 2:7). And God has the power and the willingness to breathe a new breath of life into anyone who has lost his own energy and enthusiasm.

Just as a shepherd makes sure his sheep are content and well-cared for, so God wants to restore joy and gladness to your life, to heal the wounds that wear you down.

Take time today to read Psalm 23…and be refreshed by its good news!

Did This Police Officer Have a New Calling?

One of my officers tapped me on the arm right after I got off the radio telling the precinct that we’d made a bust. “Sarge,” he said, nodding toward the squad car. “The girl says she knows you.” Yeah, I wanted to say. Right.

I’m in charge of the St. Petersburg, Florida, vice squad, and we’d just busted a drug deal in an alley off Fourth Street, a notorious neighborhood. I was focused on the dealer, not the prostitute we’d caught him selling a rock of crack cocaine to.

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I glanced at her, huddled in the backseat of a squad car. Typical crack addict: pale and thin to the point of emaciation, with short, dirty hair. How did she know me? Had I arrested her before? The officer handed me her driver’s license. The young woman in the picture looked so different—long hair and big brown eyes—I checked the name. Melissa Collora. Age 21. I almost dropped the license. I did know her. When I was a kid, the Colloras lived right next door. This was the little girl I used to babysit.

I went over to the squad car. “Melissa? What are you doing?”

Her sunken brown eyes were glazed but unmistakable. “What do you think?” she said, then looked away.

“Is there anything I can do to help you?”

“If you can’t get me a rock, just leave me alone,” she snarled.

I didn’t ask the question I really wanted to ask. What happened, Melissa, to the girl I used to know?

I’m a man of faith. I try to see the best in people, as I know God does. That’s not easy with a job like mine. I’m a 15-year police veteran. The past seven years I’ve run the vice squad. I see the worst that people do to one another—and to themselves—and I deal with some truly hopeless cases. Cases so terrible and heartbreaking I can’t afford to let myself get emotionally involved. I couldn’t imagine that Melissa Collora was one of them.

I remembered being at the Colloras’ house on steamy summer days when I was 15 or so. Melissa would have been about three. Her brothers and I played football in the yard. Melissa would sit on the swing-set clutching her teddy bear, watching us with those big brown eyes. So sweet. So innocent.

I remembered her father too. All the boys on our block loved Mr. Collora, a big guy with a great sense of humor. He owned a gas station and an auto lot, and he’d let us kids play around in his jalopies. Then about the time Melissa was eight, Mr. Collora died. I went into the Army shortly after that. I hadn’t seen Melissa or her brothers in the 13 years since.

I called my mother as soon as I got home that night. “Guess who I arrested today,” I told her. “Melissa Collora.”

“That’s terrible, Tim,” she said. “I’d heard she was in trouble.”

Mom filled me in. Mrs. Collora remarried. Melissa’s step-father abused her. In 1993 her mother committed suicide. Melissa went to live with relatives outside New York City. That’s where she discovered crack and life on the street.

I hung up the phone, depressed. Not because it wasn’t a familiar story. It was. This time, though, I had actually known the girl before her life went wrong. That’s what really hurt.

The next time Melissa and I crossed paths, she was getting arrested on yet another prostitution charge. “You see her a lot?” I asked the arresting officer.

“Melissa? She practically owns the corner of Forty-eighth and Fourth. Even wrote her name in the cement to keep the other girls away.”

She had a black eye and bruises all over her arms. “Melissa, what can I do?” I asked, though hard experience told me not much. I was a vice cop, not some bleeding-heart social worker.

“I told you before,” she snapped. “Just leave me alone.”

Since age 18 Melissa was booked more than a dozen times for drug possession and prostitution. Sooner or later she’d rack up enough convictions to send her to state prison for a very long time.

I’d see her every week, either at the station house or walking the streets. She wouldn’t look me in the eye. Sometimes I ignored her. My cop instincts said she was never going to change. That’s what the streets do to you. I’d seen it a thousand times. The damage starts young. By the time they start taking drugs and selling their bodies, it’s too late. But then I’d think, How can I turn my back on this kid? Invariably, though, Melissa would tell me to get lost.

“That girl’s a lost cause,” the guys on the squad said. “Why do you keep trying?” But no matter how many times I told myself it was pointless, I kept picturing that wide-eyed little girl in her swing, who’d had her whole life ahead of her.

One day I gave a presentation about prostitution to a St. Petersburg civic group. One of the slides I used was a booking shot of Melissa. A woman in the audience asked who she was, and I told Melissa’s story.

The woman came up to me afterward along with a friend. “I’m Linda Cheney, from Praise Cathedral,” she said. “This is Tracy. We’re looking for a woman to sponsor for the Walter Hoving Home in New York, a recovery program for prostitutes. How about Melissa?”

“I don’t think she’s your girl,” I said. “Melissa, she doesn’t want to recover.”

Linda slipped me her card. “Call me if anything changes.”

“All right,” I said. “But I doubt it will.”

There I was again, the hard-nosed cop.

I stuck Linda’s card in my desk drawer. I probably would have forgotten about it, except for a few days later. My team cornered a prostitute and her client in a rubble-strewn lot off Forty-eighth Avenue. It was Melissa. I turned and walked away. I had a sick feeling in my stomach. Melissa was looking at hard time now. At least 10 years. She was barely in her 20s.

“She wants to talk to you,” one of my officers said.

I walked over slowly and leaned into the window of the squad car. Melissa was hunched over in the backseat, her hands cuffed behind her. I didn’t say anything. Just stood. What was there left to say?

She stared at her feet. “I think … ,” she began. She lifted her head. Those big brown eyes looked straight into mine. “I think I need help.”

My instincts said, don’t trust her. Crackheads use anybody and anything to get what they want. She was in deep and she knew it. She’d say anything. Drugs strip you of your soul. I thought about the first time we’d busted her. She told my guys she knew me. Why? She didn’t have to. Had that been a cry for help? That one part of her the streets hadn’t claimed? Was it enough? “I’ll see what I can do.”

Back at the precinct, I fished Linda Cheney’s card out of my desk and called her. “I think I found one for you,” I said. “I’ll take it from here,” she replied.

She called back the next day. “The Hoving Home will take her,” she said. “My church will cover the plane tickets and fees. All we need now is the judge’s approval.”

“I’ll talk to the prosecutor, but don’t get your hopes up,” I warned her. “You’ll have to convince the judge that Melissa wants to turn over a new leaf.”

“Tracy or I will testify,” Linda said. “We met with Melissa in jail this morning. She told us she’s accepted Jesus. She wants to start a new life. That’s why she asked you for help.”

Don’t kid yourself, lady, I wanted to say. But I kept my mouth shut. I would have to testify at Melissa’s trial. You don’t lie on the stand. I wasn’t going to say anything I didn’t believe, no matter what Melissa claimed. What if she was sincere, though? Linda and Tracy believed her, but they were church ladies. Turned out the prosecutor was on board. What about me? What did I believe? I wasn’t sure.

The judge was a real hardliner. He scowled at Melissa as the bailiff led her into the courtroom. He was ready to send her away right then.

“Your Honor,” the prosecutor began, “the state recommends that Melissa Collora’s sentence be commuted to treatment at the Walter Hoving Home in New York. A church group is willing to sponsor the treatment.”

The judge looked incredulous. Tracy took the stand. She spoke of Melissa’s faith conversion and said she believed it was sincere. “Who are we to know what is truly in a person’s heart?” she asked.

The judge looked at her. “If I had a nickel for everybody who comes into my court and says they’ve changed their lives, I’d be a rich man.”

I was next. The judge fixed me with his sharp eyes. “Your Honor,” I said, “if I had a nickel for everyone who tells me that they’ve changed their lives, I’d be a rich man too.”

“So what makes this young woman different?” he countered.

“It’s my understanding,” I continued, “that Melissa Collora has had a transformation. I believe faith can change lives. I believe it can change Melissa’s.”

There was dead silence in the courtroom. Finally the judge spoke.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said. “A veteran police supervisor testifying on behalf of a prostitute?” He turned to Melissa. “Young lady, I was going to sentence you to ten years. I commute your sentence to treatment at the Walter Hoving Home. A lot of people are sticking their necks out for you—me included. Do not violate this trust. Don’t blow this chance. It’s your last one.”

He banged his gavel and Melissa was led away.

Melissa called me from Linda’s cell phone on the way to the Hoving Home. “Tim, I just want to thank you … ,” she started to say. Then the signal faded. I didn’t need to hear anymore. What I did for her wasn’t much, but I think it was the best thing I could have done. Even a vice cop can’t go through life letting it harden him. Maybe that’s where I’d changed. I believed in her.

It’s up to Melissa now. And to the One who made sure our paths kept intersecting until we both saw what he did—a young woman with a whole new life ahead of her, a life in him.

This story first appeared in the July 2004 issue of Guideposts magazine.

DeVon Franklin on Greenlighting Faith

I work in Hollywood. maybe you’ve seen some of the films I’ve worked on—The Pursuit of Happyness, The Karate Kid, Hancock, Jumping the Broom and Heaven Is for Real, to name a few. But you might not recognize me. That’s because I’m not an actor. I’m the guy behind the scenes.

As a former senior vice president of production for Columbia Pictures and the current president and CEO of the newly formed Franklin Entertainment, my job is to get films made. I’ve shepherded productions from beginning to end.

I’m proud to help produce family-oriented, uplifting and inspirational films. It’s what I’ve dreamed of doing since I was a kid. Life is good, and I feel very blessed. But I didn’t always feel that way. My journey was complicated and sometimes painful.

It goes back to my dad, Donald Ray Franklin I. He was handsome, outgoing, charming—the center of attention at social gatherings, the kind of man people gravitated toward. He had ambition and the intelligence to match it. He was working his way up the corporate ladder at UPS. Fast.

That meant going on a lot of after-work outings, where drinking was a way for an up-and-coming young executive to fit in with the old guard, the established successes. He should have known he couldn’t handle it, with his family history. His father and two of his brothers were alcoholics.

But that’s the way it always happens. No one wants to be an alcoholic. Dad thought he had it under control, I guess.

He didn’t. He stayed out later and later and would come home too drunk to make it to work in the morning. Finally he was fired from UPS. My mom, Paulette, had to fill the gaps.

Somehow she managed to raise me and my brothers—Donald Ray II and David Brandon—and hold down a receptionist job, all while trying to deal with Dad and his addiction. M y early childhood memories were disjointed and hazy, scattered snapshots of family dysfunction.

I remember Dad staggering through the front door one night, reeking of booze. Mom hid the car keys because she didn’t want him to head back out for another round. He flew into a rage. He pinned her down on their bed.

“Give me those keys!” he bellowed. Mom resisted. Dad yelled louder. I stood frozen in the corner, helpless, petrified.

Mom would beg God to take away Dad’s desire to drink, ask him to heal our family, but things only got worse. Dad’s drunken rages were frequent. He would steal Mom’s hard-earned money—money that was supposed to keep food on our table and a roof over our heads—for his binges.

He didn’t seem to care about us anymore, or care about anything but getting drunk.

Then one day, Dad left. I was too young to understand it fully, but I knew that something big had happened. Days, weeks, months went by—and still no sign of him. But Mom never gave up on him. She’d always pray for him. I never heard her say one negative thing about him.

I was nine years old when all of a sudden Dad started coming around again, like an answer to Mom’s prayers. That’s why she never said anything nasty about him. She knew he would come back.

And he was different. He was sober. He found a job and a place to stay. He even began going to church. It was really great for a while, until he had a massive heart attack.

Years before, doctors had said he needed a heart transplant. But he had ignored their advice, and the years of alcohol and nicotine abuse damaged his heart even further.

My mother brought my brothers and me to see Dad in the hospital the next day after school. We spent the afternoon together. Before we left, he had us all huddle close to him so he could hug us.

“As soon as I get out of here we’re going to go to church together,” he said. “We’re going to be a family again.” I hugged him with all my strength, wanting desperately to believe that, needing to believe it.

The next day, just as we were walking out the door for another visit with Dad, the phone rang. Mom answered. “No!” she screamed. “Please, no!” She hung up, sobbing. Dad had suffered another heart attack. He was dead, at only 36.

Mom took us to the hospital to see him one last time. We walked through the double doors of the gray, sterile morgue. There he was, my father, lying on a metal slab, his eyes closed. I might have thought he was sleeping if it hadn’t been for the eerie stillness of his body.

“Kiss your dad goodbye,” Mom said softly. I watched as Donald Ray kissed him, and then it was my turn. When I stepped forward I tried not to hesitate. I leaned in and kissed my father on his forehead. He was cold as ice.

I stepped back, feeling a chill inside, as if something deep within me had died with him.

How could God let this happen? Why did he answer Mom’s prayers only to take Dad anyway? Mom always told us that God had a plan for everyone, but allowing a man’s life to end just when he was putting it back together? That made no sense at all.

Mom ushered us out. I took one last look back at my father, lying on that cold slab, a tableau of lost promise. As the morgue door swung shut, sealing the distance between us, I vowed, That is not going to happen to me. I will make something of myself.

I buried my anger, hurt and confusion inside, and threw myself into academics and activities. As a teenager, I had something planned every waking moment. I helped out at the church led by my uncle, Dr. D. J. Williams, my grandmother’s brother-in-law, and preached my first sermon at 15.

I developed an interest in theater and got involved in the program at school. I didn’t just watch movies and television shows, I studied them, wanting to figure out how stories and scenes were put together, wanting to know how to move and inspire people through entertainment, the way The Cosby Show and The Color Purple inspired me.

By the time I entered college, at the University of Southern California, my ambition was at full throttle. I became a business-administration major with a cinema-television minor, a hybrid education to complement my Hollywood aspirations.

Instead of going home for breaks and holidays, I stayed in Los Angeles and worked, some summers holding three jobs just to make ends meet. I was that driven.

During my years at USC, I was an intern for Will Smith’s management and production company. When I graduated, I became his producing partner’s assistant.

I showed such potential, he entrusted me with responsibilities typically given to executives. I read scripts and attended development meetings and after-work events, where connections were made.

My life was not so different from my dad’s early in his corporate career. It wasn’t lost on me that I’d inherited his ambition and his head for business. But that meant I might have inherited his weaknesses too, so I did everything I could to make sure I didn’t go down the road he did.

One night I stayed late at work and mapped out a long-term plan for myself, each rung up the ladder clearly marked with age and title. No chance I’d lose my way. I would be a junior executive by the time I turned 25. I would become vice president of a film company at 30.

I had everything set to happen before I hit the age of 36. With my drive and work ethic, what could go wrong?

But 18 months later, I was still an assistant. I was working harder than ever but I wasn’t going anywhere. I was stuck. Frustrated. Miserable. Angry.

Was this God’s plan for me? Wasn’t my dedication to him and to my career enough to show I was different from my dad? I was going to church, praying regularly, preaching whenever my uncle called on me.

Every task I put my hand to, I accomplished as close to perfection as I could. Why wasn’t I getting ahead? Was there something about me that wasn’t good enough?

One morning when I got to the office, I felt frustration and depression overwhelming me. I escaped to a quiet bathroom and locked myself in a stall. Call it my emergency prayer closet, but that’s where I had it out with God. “You said I can come boldly before you. Well, here I am.…”

I let everything out, my fears and my desires, my hurt and my confusion.

I’d been racing to beat the clock, determined to get to the top of the ladder before the age of 36.

Thirty-six. When everything ended so tragically for my dad.

Was fear driving me instead of faith? Because I was scared my time would be cut short before I fulfilled my potential? I’d thought I was doing what God wanted, but my perspective was off-kilter. My ambition needed to be rooted in faith, not fear.

I took a deep breath. “God, I need you to move today,” I said. “I can’t keep living like this.”

That evening, my boss called me into his office to tell me it was time for me to move on. I was shocked, but I realized God had heard my prayer and had answered. After a series of unproductive interviews I decided it was time to quit and just step out in faith.

Less than a week later, I was working as a junior executive at a prolific production company, Edmonds Entertainment. I’ve always made sure to set aside time to be in God’s presence, reading the Bible daily and honoring the Sabbath, even if it meant missing an evening shoot.

The more I’ve surrendered to God, the more he’s moved on my behalf. Six months after my thirtieth birthday, I landed the vice-president position I’d aimed for. That six-month delay was like a little reminder from God: My time, son, not yours.

Now, at 36, I’ve just been given the opportunity to run my own production company. I’m achieving my dreams, going on faith, not fear, which is what God wanted me to understand all along.

I always wonder what it would be like if my dad were still around to experience all of this with me. I hope that he’d be proud of me and my brothers. Yet I’m thankful for my Heavenly Father. I know that first and foremost, I am his son, and I will go anywhere he leads.

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Desperate to Help Her Addicted Daughter, a Mother in Denial Turned to God

Mrs. Naman, we need you to come to the high school—immediately.”

The phone call was from the secretary at my 15-year-old daughter Natalie’s school.

I have three children, one older than Natalie, one younger. I had never been summoned to a school office before. And certainly not for anything like this. It just wasn’t possible!

I called my husband, Peter, a surgeon at the hospital in our Pittsburgh suburb. “Meet me at Natalie’s school,” I said. “They said she was caught with substances. What does that mean?”

“Not good,” said Peter. “I’ll be there.”

Natalie was in the principal’s office, surrounded by school officials and three police officers.

I couldn’t process everything they were saying. “Possession…heroin…backpack…zero tolerance…suspension…charges.”

On the principal’s desk were small packets of white powder, a spoon and syringes.

This couldn’t be happening. There had to have been some mistake. We were a loving, happy family from a nice neighborhood. Peter was a respected doctor. I had dreamed of becoming a mom my whole life, and I had worked hard at it. Natalie was a wonderful child. Bright. Creative. Game for anything. Practically perfect.

“Are you sure?” I asked the circle of stern faces. “Natalie is a good girl. I never saw any sign of this.”

“Parents often don’t,” one of the police officers said matter-of-factly.

On the way home, Natalie insisted it was all a mistake. “It wasn’t mine, Mom,” she said. “Someone asked me to hold it for them. I don’t have a drug problem. You’ve got to believe me!”

“If she’s injecting heroin, that’s serious,” Peter said later that night. We’d stayed up talking to Natalie; now it was just the two of us. “Heroin affects the brain in unique ways. It is very addictive, especially for adolescents.”

“She told us it wasn’t even hers,” I said. “Shouldn’t we give her the benefit of the doubt?”

I remembered occasionally finding little packets in Natalie’s room like the ones I’d seen on the principal’s desk. I’d had no idea what they were and left them alone. I suppose I hadn’t wanted to know. I’d put them out of my mind.“

Natalie needs to go into treatment immediately,” Peter said.

“She’s not some junkie,” I said. “What will her friends think? Everyone will know! She’ll be an outcast.”

Peter shook his head. “We need to intervene as soon as possible,” he said.

Reluctantly, I agreed to enroll Natalie in an outpatient treatment program, the least disruptive option. I certainly wasn’t going to send her away to some facility. There would be so many questions.

And I insisted that Peter and I tell only our parents, no one else in our extended family or circle of friends. Other families at school would find out through the rumor mill, but there was no need to tarnish Natalie’s reputation.

I went to bed shaken but determined to turn this situation around. I also felt something I hadn’t experienced before. Anger toward God.

“How could you let this happen?” I demanded. “I did everything right.”

I had worked so hard to be a perfect mom. I’d been a teacher before the kids were born, but I’d quit to raise them. My dream was the kind of family you see in Hallmark movies. I’d planned so carefully, so perfectly. This couldn’t be happening. Not to us.

October? Time to pick pumpkins and decorate Halloween cookies as a family. Christmas Eve? Arrive at church early to get front-row seats. I made meat loaf from scratch, baked, always brought treats for school parties. I covered all the bases. Heroin wasn’t part of the plan.

What I couldn’t accept was how all of those positive experiences had led Natalie to…drugs.

“It’s my fault,” Peter said. “I should have been home more.” His hospital schedule was demanding.

“I was the one who was home with her,” I said. “Which is worse?”

For a while, it seemed as if my instinct to keep things quiet and give Natalie a chance to do better was working. The school wanted to turn her suspension into an expulsion, but we convinced the administration to allow Natalie to become a full-time online student.

She was charged with drug possession, convicted and sentenced to probation with treatment, which she was already doing.

Natalie seemed relieved to be out from under the social pressure of in-person school. A boy asked her to a dance. We let her go and even invited other families to gather at our house before chaperoning the kids. Some of the moms seemed standoffish or awkward, but others were nice. How many people knew about Natalie? Inside I cringed. Shouldn’t this be a private matter?

I tried not to notice at first that Natalie’s grades were slipping. (She was just struggling with remote learning, I told myself.) Or that she was staying up later and leaving the house with people I didn’t know.

Then I found a syringe in Natalie’s room. I confronted her, and she insisted she had no idea how it got there. I wanted so badly to believe her, but Peter warned me that things were getting worse.

Soon the signs were unmistakable, even to me. Natalie began nodding off during meals. Disappearing for an entire day or night. She began to look haggard.

I worked harder and harder. We took her to psychiatrists and counselors. I relented and agreed to send to her to an inpatient treatment program. I was desperate, desperate to turn all this around, to get back to the way I thought things were.

I tried to reason Natalie out of using. Begged. Cried. Issued ultimatums. I scoured her room for drug paraphernalia. Stayed up all night waiting for her to come home.

By this point, I’d given up on God. One Sunday, our priest said in a sermon that sometimes God comes alongside us in suffering but doesn’t immediately solve the problem.

Well, he should, I thought bitterly.

I felt as if we were in this alone. “Where do you even get drugs?” I asked Natalie one day as we drove to the store. I couldn’t imagine drugs being sold in a town like ours.

“You mean walking distance or driving distance?” Natalie responded. I looked at her in shock.

“It’s everywhere, Mom. So many kids my age take drugs. Families here have tons of money, and parents have no idea what’s going on.” We passed a house, and her face darkened.

“What?” I asked.

“The guy in that house will sell you any drug you want,” she said. “See why it’s so hard to quit?”

After yet another relapse, Natalie began telling me, “I just want to close my eyes and never wake up.”

One Saturday morning, I peeked into her room and saw her motionless on her bed. Her skin was purple.

“Peter!” I shrieked. Natalie had overdosed. Peter rushed in with a container of Narcan, and Natalie revived. I staggered out of my daughter’s room and collapsed in the hallway.

I began to cry. I couldn’t stop. I lay on the floor unable to move. Just like Natalie, I wanted to close my eyes and never wake up.

That thought frightened me. I sat up. “I have to go out,” I told Peter. Natalie was stable and under his observation. I drove straight to our church. The sanctuary was open but unlit. I walked to a pew and got on my knees.

A sensation of utter weakness and imperfection engulfed me. I was broken. Natalie was broken. Our family was broken, and I couldn’t fix or even hide the problem.

“I can’t do this on my own,” I said to God. “Please give me your strength and wisdom.”

I didn’t hear an answer. But on the drive back home, I began to feel more clearheaded. I had been trying to do the impossible: fix someone else’s addiction. I had gone against everything the professionals told us. I’d downplayed the severity of the problem. Denied, denied, denied. Kept things quiet. Tried to force Natalie to get better.

I had turned away from the one thing I needed most: trust.

I had not trusted God—my biggest denial of all. I had not trusted our friends or extended family enough to be honest with them or ask for help.

And I hadn’t trusted Natalie. She was an adolescent and needed guidance and love. But if she was going to get better, the change would have to start with her. I couldn’t will her into recovery. I wasn’t in control.

I wish I could say I returned from the church transformed into exactly the mom Natalie needed me to be. That’s not how it works. I’d simply taken the first step on a long journey. That meant trusting my daughter to God.

It took another overdose and more than a year of relapses before Natalie finally decided, on her own, that she’d had enough and wanted to get better.

Along the way, I gradually figured out how to help her. I attended support groups and talked to a therapist. I worked on setting aside my drive for perfection that made it so hard for me to let Natalie make her own decisions. I stopped denying that we weren’t the perfect family.

How long had I burdened Natalie with my outsize expectations? Probably her whole life.

“I can’t fix this for you,” I told her. “But I love you, and I’ll be at your side when you’re ready to try.”

By the grace of God, Natalie is two and a half years clean now. She decided to enter a treatment program, and she is determined to remain sober. This year, she started taking community college classes.

Our family remains a work in progress, but I have hope. Why? Maybe it’s moments like a recent afternoon when Natalie and I were on our way home from running errands.

“One more stop,” I announced as I pulled into the church parking lot. We had parked in this exact spot at church many times over the years of my daughter’s addiction. I had always invited Natalie to come inside. Mostly she stayed in the car and played on her cell phone. I knew better than to ask this time. “Just going inside to pray for a few minutes,” I said. “I’ll be right back.”

“Wait,” Natalie said. “I’ll come.”

I did my best to hide my elation.

The sanctuary was open but unlit, just as it had been on that day she’d overdosed. We knelt side by side. I wondered what she prayed for, but I didn’t ask.

Together we lit two candles near the entrance and watched their soft glow.

“I prayed for you,” Natalie said as we headed back outside. She reached out to take my hand.

“Me too,” I said, giving her hand a squeeze.

We approached the car.

He hears us,” Natalie said.

“He does,” I said.

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Desert Solitaire

I woke up this morning 3,000 miles from where I wanted to be. My wife Kate and I just finished a week’s vacation backpacking in Death Valley, the desert national park in California. Maybe hiking through barren, rocky canyons and sleeping in frigid mountain passes isn’t everyone’s idea of an idyllic vacation. But Kate and I needed to get away from New York, away from people and noise and city urgency—and there is probably no place farther from all that than Death Valley, a 156-mile-long, bone-dry trough surrounded by towering mountain ranges.

Death Valley is the hottest (over 130 degrees in summer), driest (less than two inches of rain per year) and lowest place in North America (282 feet below sea level). I had never been there, despite growing up in California. Kate had been once before at a pivotal time in her life. She was deciding whether to pursue ordination as an Episcopal priest. Sitting under an ancient stand of limber pines at the top of Telescope Peak (11,049 feet above the valley floor, to give an idea of the immense contrasts), she said yes to God. We thought the park would be a good place to seek what we so desperately miss in New York—the spiritual renewal of solitude.

Well, cresting the Panamint Range, which separates the valley from the rest of California, I wondered whether we were overdoing it on the solitude. Death Valley on a winter weekday is very, very, very empty. All around rose silent, implacable mountains.

The valley floor, white with salt deposits, stretched to the limit of sight—a long way, since the dry desert air is remarkably, almost disorientingly clear. I didn’t say anything, because I know how much Kate loves the desert. But inside I wondered, Is this place too harsh? It all looked so lifeless, so indifferent. “The desert never really loves you back,” Kate said approvingly. How could that be a good thing?

Then we began walking. We explored three parts of the park: Fall Canyon, a narrow red-rock canyon winding into the Amargosa Range; sand dunes at Mesquite Flat, rising about 100 feet above the valley floor; and sagebrush country at Emigrant Pass in the Panamints, about halfway between the valley and Telescope Peak. The going each place was slow—rocky, sandy or snowy. But the slower we went, the more I began to see.

In Fall Canyon, a turkey vulture patrolled the canyon mouth, lazily riding air currents, scanning for mice and gophers—the very tip of a complex canyon ecosystem. On the dunes, I noticed something black and shiny near my foot. I bent down and saw an inch-long beetle shuffling through the sand. It turns out there are four species of beetle found only in Death Valley—along with 15 species of snail, four species of fish (yes, fish!) and a dozen species of plant. Many more desert plants and animals also call the valley home, from bighorn sheep to the puffball-sized kangaroo rat, which metabolizes water from dry seeds and reabsorbs the moisture it exhales while breathing.

The valley, it turns out, teems with life. You just have to know where to look. On our last (cold!) morning at snowbound Emigrant Pass, we awoke to a frozen tent, temperature below 10 degrees, solid ice in our water bottles—and the sound of a lark greeting the sun. From where we camped we could see the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada mountains, including Mount Whitney, highest mountain in the continental U.S.

The day before we had been on the valley floor. I realized suddenly that in this supposedly barren place we had seen, in a way, the whole world—the high, the low, the silent places, the singing birds, the sprouting sage and the dry, dry earth. Kate is right. Unlike forested mountains with chattering streams and flowery meadows, the desert does not love you back. It’s too busy surviving. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t deserve your love. You have to learn how to love it. How to look beyond its stony exterior, listen to its pregnant silence and let it live on its own fierce terms.

That sounds daunting, and I was daunted at first. But by the time we drove away, back to Los Angeles and the airplane home, I didn’t want to leave. Maybe in Death Valley I, too, in some inarticulate way said yes to God. On his own fierce terms.

Jim Hinch is a senior editor at GUIDEPOSTS. Reach him at jhinch@guideposts.org.

Deliverance Alley: Helping the Homeless with Substance Abuse

The place I call Deliverance Alley is a vacant lot of grass and dirt in a neglected south Dallas neighborhood. Drive by and you won’t see much. A sign on a deli across the street reads: “No trespassing, prostitution, drug dealing, loitering, weapons or criminal activity will be tolerated.”

Why do I call this seemingly god-forsaken slice of scarred urban ground Deliverance Alley? What if I said it’s where God delivered me one afternoon almost two decades ago?

When I landed in Deliverance Alley, I wasn’t just homeless. I was far from home in every possible way. I’d been born into a military family in Kansas City, Missouri. My dad, Wendell Gene Parker, was a lieutenant colonel in the Army. My mother, Mary Ann Parker, raised me and three younger brothers.

My dad served in Korea and Vietnam. I was five when he was transferred to a base in Europe. It was the 1960s. Dad was upfront with me and my siblings about the advantages of moving to Europe. “We are a Black family,” he said. “There is a lot less racism over there than in America. Sad but true.”

The military was one of the nation’s first major institutions to desegregate. On our base in Europe, I played with kids regardless of skin color. We traveled to European cities on vacations, visited art museums and learned German. Teachers at school taught us about the realities of slavery and the many contributions made by Black people to American life.

Everything changed when we returned stateside in the early 1970s. Just off the plane in South Carolina, I noticed “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms. That was illegal, but the airport didn’t seem to care.

My father always spoke his mind, and I am every inch his daughter.

“Excuse me,” I said to a passerby, pointing at the whites-only bathroom. “What color do I have to be to go in there?”

The woman regarded me with an expression of utter disdain. How dare you? she seemed to say before stalking off. Dad yanked me right out of that airport. “You have no idea what you’re doing,” he hissed. “You could get us all killed.”

We settled in Texas, where my dad was promoted to assistant commanding officer at Fort Hood and bought a house in Dallas for Mom and us kids. My brothers were good kids and had jobs after school, but they were still harassed by police almost every day.

Living in a constant state of fear wears you down. I told Dad I wanted to join the Army, but he said it was no place for a woman. I turned my back and moved to New York. I worked as a customer service manager for telecom companies. I made good money.

There was one problem. Remember how I said I was my father’s daughter? That had a downside.

Dad parented my brothers and me with military discipline. We followed a schedule, did chores and never talked back. Every weekend, he made us straighten up our rooms like little soldiers. We had to clean, fold and put everything away. When I say clean, I mean even the baseboards.

I chafed under Dad’s rules and told him I wasn’t in the Army. I even wrote him a letter when I was little telling him I was glad he’d been sent to Vietnam because now I didn’t have to clean my room. Imagine receiving such a letter from your child.

On my own for the first time in New York, I gave free rein to my contrarian side. I partied on weekends and enjoyed the nightlife. I met and married a man who’d seen combat in the military, but his PTSD contributed to him abusing me physically. I had to leave that marriage for fear of my life.

I returned to Dallas and met another man. I fell hard. They say love is blind. Tell me about it. I didn’t even realize at first that he sold drugs. He was good-looking and seemed to do well financially, and he treated me like a queen. Turned out, he was riding the 1980s cocaine wave by cooking and selling crack.

I can’t explain why, but at some point, I decided to join him. Maybe it was that misguided love, more desperation than devotion. I started doing drugs myself and dealing.

I had been raised in church, and I believed in God. I knew I was violating every moral principle Mom and Dad had tried to instill in me. I was aware that I had crossed a line and might never be able to turn back. So many addicts can’t. That is what addiction does to you. It takes over your life. Totally. Eventually even the drugs couldn’t dull my shame and self-loathing.

To this day, I am haunted by the time a little girl, just a wisp of a thing, came to the door of a crack house I ran. “Is my momma here?” she asked. “We’re hungry, and she took our food stamps.”

The woman had tried to sell the food stamps for drug money. “Go take care of your kids!” I screamed at her, surprised by my rage. But I went right back to selling drugs. It was as if I had lost my soul.

Eventually I left that bad boyfriend behind—but not the drug trade. I discovered I was pregnant with my boyfriend’s child. I vowed to go straight but was soon back selling drugs to support myself. Arrested for drug possession, I was forced to ask my parents to take temporary custody of my son.

They went ballistic at first, but I was their daughter and they did what they could to support me and my child.

I begged God so many times to help me get sober, but my contrarian spirit was too strong. Deep inside I refused to give my life to God the way I had given my life to drugs and addiction.

That’s when I wound up at Deliverance Alley. I was homeless, just released from another stint behind bars and ready to forget my troubles by getting righteously high. Night was falling, and I figured I was out of last chances.

It was 2007. Deliverance Alley was a popular spot for addicts. There was an old sofa on the grass and a bucket for a bathroom. A bunch of my drug-using friends were there, and they welcomed me back.

I sat on the couch, prepped my crack pipe, raised it to my lips. Out of nowhere, a voice spoke in my mind: “Say goodbye to all this, Rhonda.”

I jumped up, looked around. Was someone playing a trick on me? The voice spoke again, same words, even louder, clearer.

I freaked out. I ran across the street. I looked back at the vacant lot, and I didn’t recognize it. As if I’d been transported to another place.

Some kind of powerful presence seemed to come down and root my feet to the sidewalk. I heard people speaking. “Queen, you all right?” That was my street name. Everything seemed far away.

I took the drugs out of my pocket and handed them to someone. It was as if I had let go of something more than just the drugs. I felt a warmth enfold me. I broke down weeping.

The presence freed my feet and directed my steps to a place called Dallas International Street Church. They run a one-year residential discipleship program that includes counseling and addiction recovery. I laid down my contrarian spirit, admitted I was powerless and surrendered myself to that life-giving program. To this day, I can’t explain how it all happened, only that I felt as if my soul had been freed.

Fast forward 17 years. I am sober, married and the founder of an organization called Making It Count, Inc., which offers housing and street support services to people like I once was: lost, homeless and wondering if there’s any hope left for them. I help them see there is.

I reconciled with my child and my parents. Before my dad died in 2015, I made amends for the ways I had hurt him. Including that mean letter I’d sent him in Vietnam. I came to accept that for a man like him, strict discipline was the way he best knew to show love. I forgave him for that.

I am also grateful to him. I believe it was the military discipline he’d instilled in me that enabled me to form the daily responsibilities that helped me stick with recovery. God guided me, but I had to do the work.

I run Making It Count, Inc., the same way. Guests in my sober living house do chores, keep their rooms spotless and stick to a schedule. As an active addict, the only structure in your life is getting the next fix. Recovering addicts need new structures. Being contrarian and questioning the status quo are necessary sometimes. Addiction recovery is not one of those times. My guests sometimes chafe at my discipline. In the long run, they are grateful, just as I am. In recovery, surrender equals freedom.

Since Making It Count, Inc., was founded in 2010, we have distributed more than 100,000 meals, 75,000 hygiene kits and 12,500 coats to people who need them. We partner with churches and other regional service providers. Every Wednesday, we launder people’s clothes for free. We have been recognized by numerous Dallas civic organizations, and I recently received a community service award from the Greater North Dallas Business and Professional Women’s Club.

I give all the credit to God and my tireless volunteers.

Making It Count, Inc., is now in the process of designing and getting permits for our new headquarters. I envision a full-service resource center for homeless people struggling with substance use. A place of love, acceptance and pathways to recovery. I’m sometimes asked if it is possible to get sober without bringing God into your life. I suppose it might be, but that hasn’t been my experience. It was God who spoke to me that day at Deliverance Alley and moved my feet and soul in the right direction. There’s no other explanation.

Guess where I plan to locate that headquarters? That’s right. Deliverance Alley. My husband and I recently bought that vacant lot. We do street ministry there now. I can’t wait until the building goes up and we can begin offering deliverance on a major scale.

Like I said, there is always hope. There is always another chance. That’s God’s promise. And God always delivers on his promises.

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Delilah Has Love to Spare

One of my favorite things about doing my radio show is hearing people’s stories. Every night, without fail, someone will call to wish a spouse happy birthday or congratulate a child who’s graduating. Then as their story unfolds, I realize that it was the whole reason God had me in the studio that night—to make that connection, to have that conversation, to share a prayer or piece of Scripture, to share a memory or song.

Years ago, when I was in my twenties, I went to a tiny church—there were maybe 50 or 60 members—where the minister, Pastor Mike McCorkle, preached a life-changing sermon. I asked him about it recently, and he doesn’t even remember what he said. I do. I’ll never forget.

He imagined that when he stands before the Lord, when he dies, he’s going to be asked two questions. The first is “What did you do with me?” Did you give God your best or just the scraps? Was faith just an afterthought? Did you put Jesus at the center of your being? And the second: “What did you do with the people I put in your path?” Every person you encounter, your family members, your teachers, your friends, your coworkers, even strangers, are put there for a reason. Did you honor them? Did you respect them? Did you take the time to get to know their story?

The conversations I have with my listeners are real. They know I’m going to be honest with them and they can be honest with me. Most of them know about the joys in my life and the deep sorrows I’ve had to face. None of which I could have gotten through without my faith.

I met a homeless woman on a blistering hot day in Philadelphia, and in my efforts to help her and people like her I started a charity called Point Hope (named for one of the coldest places on the planet: Point Hope, Alaska). A woman at a refugee camp in Ghana sent me an e-mail asking for help. I figured it was some sort of scam at first, but when I followed it up through friends at World Vision, I discovered she was indeed real. Since then, I’ve made dozens of trips to that refugee camp, adopted children from it and supplied it with fresh water, schools, medical stations and adult career and farming programs.

Someone was put in my path, and I felt compelled to respond.

I have 13 children—10 adopted, three biological. I’m heartbroken to say that two of them are already gone from this world. Sammy came from an orphanage in Ghana. We knew he had sickle cell anemia when he became part of our family, but he blossomed in our home. He loved to eat, to laugh, to tease, to draw, to paint, to dance. On the night the adoption was complete, he said to me, “Mama, I always thought I would die alone in the orphanage.”

As it was, he died in our arms at age 16 from complications of sickle cell. The doctors did all they could, but they couldn’t stop his heart from failing. Before he passed, Sammy pointed to me and my husband, Paul, and put his hands in the shape of a heart. Now when I am struggling and missing him, I whisper a prayer. Sometimes even within the hour, I’ll be led to something heart-shaped in nature, a seashell on the beach, a sandstone on the path. Signs from God that my son’s spirit lives on.

My world shattered a year ago, on October 2, 2017. That night, my beautiful son Zachariah Miguel Rene-Ortega, the last child I carried in my womb and gave birth to, chose to leave us. He was just 18 years old and had been battling depression. These have been the hardest months of my life and that of my family. I miss Zack every minute and hour of every day. Despite the heartache and grief, I praise God for the life I live. I know that God is looking after us, and that knowledge—along with the love and understanding of family, friends, and so many others—has kept me going.

One of my most endearing memories of my Zacky illustrates what his heart was truly like and truly capable of. When Zack was just 10 years old, a girlfriend from church let me know that the African Children’s Choir was going to perform at our church. I had been working in Ghana, West Africa, for five years and had adopted two young girls from there.

My girlfriend knew I’d love the music, and even though the choir children were from a different country, my adopted girls might like seeing other children from West Africa. We’d arrived home late the night before, after a long drive from snow-covered mountains, and woke up in time to get to the 10:30 a.m. service and the choir performance. The sink at home was full of breakfast dishes; the living room was a makeshift laundry center for ski gear. Snowboards and sleds leaned against the side of the porch.

After the service, I took my daughters to meet some of the young performers. The director of the choir, a middle-aged man from the Midwest, approached me with a broad grin, grabbed my hand and pumped my arm as he exclaimed, “Thank you! Thank you! We will be happy to come to the farm for lunch.” I tilted my head to one side and said, “Excuse me?”

“Your son, the little boy in the green shirt, just told me you have a huge farm with lots of goats and cows, and then he invited me to bring the choir to lunch. Normally the church sponsors a lunch for us at the cafeteria or a local restaurant, but your pastor is not here today,” he said. “I guess no one thought about how we would feed the children.”

The man’s enthusiastic smile was met with my bewildered expression, and just as I was about to explain that my house was filled with ski gear and my fridge was all but empty, Zack appeared at my side. He put his arms around me and said, “Mom, I told him what a good cook you are and how you feed all the orphans in Africa. Can they come home and have lunch with us?” His impish face was absolutely adorable, and his smile did to me what it always did: made me absolutely incapable of saying anything but yes….

Thirty children, eight adult chaperones, plus the director and his wife. That meant 40 guests along with my own household of 10…. My mind raced into action. I hurriedly called my husband, Paul, and asked for help. He had just dropped our teenage girls off at the farm. He agreed to rush back to the farm and start picking up skis and snowboards. I called two of my adult children, Tangi and Trey Jerome, to help as well.

When I got home, the skis, snowboards and damp gloves had all been snatched up and tossed in bins, the dirty dishes in the sink were shoved in the dishwasher and a huge pot of water was already on the stove and beginning to boil. Within a half hour, the bus arrived and 30 children between the ages of five and 18 started spilling out.

It was freezing outside, and I knew their bodies had not yet had time to acclimate to the cold, so the children were not the least bit interested in staying outside to look at our goats, horses or even the zebra. They all ran into the house trying to get warm, and although my house is a good size, together we filled up every room.

The food was ready soon, and we provided lunch. Once everyone had eaten their fill, the kids sang. Even more beautiful than the songs they’d sung at church.

After two hours of breaking bread and sharing stories and songs, the director said the choir had to leave; they had a long road trip ahead of them. The kids gave us hugs and prayed for us, then filed outside. As the bus rumbled up the long drive, light snow began to fall. I was ready to collapse into a heap when I heard Zack declare, “I hope it snows really hard and the bus gets stuck and they have to spend the night here with us!” That was one time I was so grateful that his prayers were not answered!

Zack was like me in many ways, one being that he had a big heart for others, especially those who were hurting or in need.

I won’t hold my last-born biological baby again until eternity. I won’t stroke his long, beautiful hair or feel his breath against my skin. I won’t hear his voice—except for the few recordings I have—until I see Jesus face-to-face. I hope the Lord won’t mind if I rush to hold both Zack and his older brother Sammy in my arms before getting the tour of paradise.

In the days and weeks after I lost my boys, I did not know if I had the heart to go on. When Zack took his own life, I had to step away from my radio program for three weeks before I could find the strength and courage to put my voice back on the air. The outpouring of love, support and prayer from my listeners—the hundreds of thousands of you who in that moment stopped in your path to consider where my heart was—restored me.

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