Top Ten Things I Love about Summer
24/05/10 14:56
“Flowers appear on the earth; the season of
singinghas come.” Song of Solomon 2:12
In this northern land where it feels like winter lasts forever and summer is over in a flash, we Canadian women need to “seize the summer” and get the most out of it. Here are the Top Ten Things I Love about Summer. Maybe you will relate to some of them, or replace a few with some of your own, or add one of them to your own repertoire
Read More...Don’t live in a small town if you can’t behave
07/02/10 06:15
I never thought I’d say this but living in a small town
has its disadvantages. Don’t get me wrong, I love my
little community; there’s no better place to raise
kids. But the very thing that makes you feel safe –
that people know each other – can also come back to
bite you if you misbehave.
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Mr Opposite
03/10/09 10:09
Our first snowfall brought more than the promise of a
white Christmas. It gave me a chance to thank God for
my most valuable earthly gift – my husband, Mr.
Opposite. We discovered soon after our marriage that
while opposites attract, they can also repel! We got
along like two cats in a sack that first year.
Fortunately, my husband learned and then taught me that
when our differences threatened to blow the lid off our
relationship, tipping the steam vent with spurts of
laughter born of grace could change everything.
Read
More...
The Great Cochin Fire
18/05/09 15:41
When my 24-year-old husband assumed his first pastorate
in a north-Saskatchewan village, he thought he’d ignite
some spiritual fire in the community. He did much more
than that. He became known as the preacher who put the
word arson in parson.
The church and parsonage where we lived was a two-acre parcel of land on a hilltop overlooking a lake. My husband kept the grass watered and cut all around the buildings but the rocky slope below our bay window was impossible to mow. The grass grew tall and untended all summer then faded and lay dormant under winter’s snow to reappear, an unsightly tangled mess in the spring. I thought it marred the beauty of our lake view so I suggested to my husband that he clean it up. Read More...
The church and parsonage where we lived was a two-acre parcel of land on a hilltop overlooking a lake. My husband kept the grass watered and cut all around the buildings but the rocky slope below our bay window was impossible to mow. The grass grew tall and untended all summer then faded and lay dormant under winter’s snow to reappear, an unsightly tangled mess in the spring. I thought it marred the beauty of our lake view so I suggested to my husband that he clean it up. Read More...
Men Have Not Changed
13/01/09 11:00
Men have not changed since the dawn of creation.
Although we have morphed from the Stone Age to the
Space Age, men have simply exchanged their crude clubs
for credit cards -- they are still hunters and
gatherers.
In Canada, the busiest shopping day of the year is December 26. It’s called Boxing Day.
In 2000, Boxing Day dawned clear and cold. Long before the sun peeked over the horizon my husband Gerry was in his car heading for Future Shop. There wasn't a soul there when he skidded into the dimly lit parking lot at 5:30 a.m.
“I’ll be first in line!” he chortled Read More...
In Canada, the busiest shopping day of the year is December 26. It’s called Boxing Day.
In 2000, Boxing Day dawned clear and cold. Long before the sun peeked over the horizon my husband Gerry was in his car heading for Future Shop. There wasn't a soul there when he skidded into the dimly lit parking lot at 5:30 a.m.
“I’ll be first in line!” he chortled Read More...
JUST OPEN THE DOOR!
08/09/08 21:49
I know a beautiful young Christian woman who is
spiritually dry right now. She hates going to church.
She says Sunday is the worst day of her week. She is
frustrated when other believers talk about hearing God
because she feels abandoned. She can’t sense His
presence. Heaven is silent. Read
More...
Boy was I in for a Big Surprise.
02/05/08 08:08
The women were excited but the men were tentative in
the weeks leading up to the “Love and Respect” marriage
conference at our church. Women buzzed around the
registration table, eager to sign up, hoping we’d get
our money’s worth once our husbands heard all the
things they were doing wrong, smartened up, and became
more like us. We had been to marriage conferences
before and, typically, it was the men who needed to do
most of the changing. I was smugly convinced this was
going to be more-of-same. Boy was I in for a Big
Surprise. Read
More...
Everybody Wants to Walk on Water
06/04/08 13:18
Everybody
wants to walk on water, but nobody wants to get out of
the boat. Have you ever noticed that? Most of us want
to experience the “wow!” with God but when He calls us
to step out in faith we say “whoa!” Too risky! Can I
really trust Him?
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BANK CARD BLUES
07/03/08 07:24
We’ve all
heard the excuse; the dog ate my homework, right? Well
how about this one? Our son incurred a rather hefty
personal debt between the end of Grade 12 in June 2006
and the first paycheck from his summer job. Most of his
days were spent a-straddle a riding mower on the
160-acre campus of the local Baptist seminary. Well,
his ship finally came in and he crowed about how rich
he was as he arrived home, paycheck waving. Always
ready to rain on the parade, I reminded him of the
chunk of change he owed us.
“I’ll get it to you,” he promised. Read More...
“I’ll get it to you,” he promised. Read More...
HEALTHY NEGLECT
26/02/08 11:38
Hearing the
door close roughly and footsteps in the foyer, I looked
up from my desk to see my 20-year-old son. He had the
look of defeat written all over him – shoulders
slouched, head drooped, arms slack. Every mother knows
that look from years of sitting in hockey arenas or on
soccer bleachers at the end of a big blowout. Your
first thought is always, “How can I cheer him up? How
can I explain that sometimes we win and sometimes we
lose and losing makes us stronger…?” You know the
drill. Read
More...
Dad is Parliament; Mom is RCMP
24/11/07 18:52
I never knew that a couple of my law-enforcement
friends were celebrities until some women visiting from
Texas clued me in.
As a Canadian, I grew up thinking our national police force – the Royal Canadian Mounted Police – were just like cops everywhere. Dressed in their regular blue uniforms with a tool belt full of weapons on their hips, they chase bad guys in their white squad cars and almost always get their man.
Read More...
As a Canadian, I grew up thinking our national police force – the Royal Canadian Mounted Police – were just like cops everywhere. Dressed in their regular blue uniforms with a tool belt full of weapons on their hips, they chase bad guys in their white squad cars and almost always get their man.
Read More...
You've Got Mail
24/11/07 18:44
My husband is a morning person. Years ago we discovered
the best way to guarantee he remained happy was for me
to stay in bed until after he left for work. That way
there was no chance I could ruin his good mood.
However, when we have houseguests, I feel compelled to get up early and make breakfast because I don't want people to know I don't do that every morning. I dutifully stumble around the kitchen making coffee, buttering toast and setting out cereal. I try to say as little as possible because I don't trust my tongue until after I've had caffeine in massive doses. That usually takes about an hour. Read More...
However, when we have houseguests, I feel compelled to get up early and make breakfast because I don't want people to know I don't do that every morning. I dutifully stumble around the kitchen making coffee, buttering toast and setting out cereal. I try to say as little as possible because I don't trust my tongue until after I've had caffeine in massive doses. That usually takes about an hour. Read More...