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From the Experts » 2008 » December
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Archive for December, 2008

Gifts from the Heart

As I’ve said many times in the past, it is wonderful to see children develop Godly character traits - love, patience, kindness, peace, etc.

This morning I was going out for a minute and Hannah wanted to watch television. I told her we were going to watch a family movie tonight and she could not watch t.v. while I was gone, but she could play a game.Â

“But there is no one to play with,” she said. “Daddy will be busy and you will be gone.”

I asked her what she wanted to play and she said, “Memory.”

Christopher was standing there and he said, “I’ll play with you, Hannah.”

I always think it’s so sweet when the children offer to do something nice for one another without any prompting on my part. It’s a treat to see this. As you experience these special moments in your home, I encourage you to write them in a special journal so that you can look back in years to come and enjoy the moment again.

Sonya

Christmas Gifts

We have always tried to emphasize the true meaning of Christmas and for the past couple of years we haven’t even had the option of buying presents. Now that doesn’t mean we haven’t bought the children anything. We just don’t go hog wild and spend a bunch of money on stuff we don’t need anyway. We always have enough little stuff to fill everyone’s stockings and we also buy something special for each child. Last year we seriously thought about not buying anything at all so we had the smallest Christmas ever in terms of gifts and honestly I don’t think having fewer gifts made our celebration for the birth of Christ any greater. We love Jesus every day and we realize we can never come near to matching the gift He has given us.

With all that said, this year I purchased a few little things here and there during the summer at yard sales. The kids are not spoiled and a used gift is just as special as a new gift to them. It is also good to recycle so we always buy used when we can. I also went out on the day after Thanksgiving to wait in line at 4:30 a.m. for a friend of mine. Since I was already awake, I decided that I would do a little shopping myself. I am glad I did because I found a few very good deals and got each child something he/she would like.

Chris and I had also wanted to buy each child a new Bible. They all have children’s Bibles, but they are beyond those now. Everyone except Hannah needed to move up to a study Bible and it just so happened that the place where I work was having a sale on Bibles. We had planned to buy everyone a Bible and have it personalized, but then I was put in the hospital last week. We found out that my blood clotting problems are back.

I did a lot of thinking while I was in the hospital and I decided that I definitely wanted to get everyone a special Bible and also have each one personalized. When I went out after Thanksgiving, what I bought Sarah and Hannah was a scrapbook. I really wanted to get the boys one, too, but they were just so expensive that I decided against it. After I spent the week in the hospital and found out about the newer clots, I decided that the scrapbooks couldn’t wait! I went back to the store yesterday and bought the boys one.

Now I’m so excited because I’ve decided to spend the month of January focusing on photographs, family history, and scrapbooking. We’re going to put the books out at each person’s assigned seat at the table and we’ll just eat in the living room until the scrapbooks are done. I think it’s going to be great fun!

I think the Bibles, scrapbooks, and stocking stuffers I bought are going to make for the most wonderful Christmas gifts ever. I LOVE giving gifts and these are perfect!! I wish everyone could have so much fun with little things as our family does. It is truly a blessing.

Sonya
www.thehomeschooladvocate.com

Creative Answer

I have felt very bad lately so I haven’t been upstairs much to the children’s area. Chris goes up there every evening when he is getting the children ready for bed, but I just don’t have the energy to climb the stairs or worry about cleaning up there. We do expect the children to do that on their own.

Today I was carrying some books upstairs that had been in the living room for a couple of weeks and as I went upstairs, I could see in the boys’ Lego play area. There are Legos everywhere.

I said, “Gee whiz, boys. Can’t you pick up the Legos as you play and keep them off the floor?”

Daniel (7) said, “But we don’t need to, Mommy. We’ve memorized where they all are so when we go in there, we just step over the ones in the floor and find an empty spot to sit in while we play.”

Sonya : )

Dealing with Bad News

After I found out that I had more blood clots in my abdomen last week, I wrote an e-mail to my editor. I had just received the news a few hours before and you can sense my frustration in the note. My editor said that it is obvious I’m upset, but that there are also parts of the e-mail that he thought might be encouraging to others who suffer with chronic pain or illness. I’m sharing part of the e-mail here in hopes that someone might benefit from this in some small way.

…………

I am still feeling awful. Â They are still running tests. Â I am probably going to go home tomorrow and be managed on an outpatient basis. Â They are relatively certain that this is a blood clotting issue, which is horrible. Â I had “numerous” new clots in my abdominal area and in the veins that go to my legs. Â This is why I’ve felt so much worse since September and particularly the past couple of weeks. Â This is VERY bad news. Â I was hoping it was NOT related to the clotting problem because this means that (a) it is not easily fixable, (b) it requires long term treatment with medicine that causes me migraines and other bad side effects, and (c) I am sicker than I’ve wanted to admit. Â

I did some research after I had Hannah and discovered that the average life expectancy after a major clotting episode like the one I had was about 7 years.  Hannah is almost 6.  I just REALLY didn’t want this to be related to my blood.  If the problems were pregnancy related, we could avoid future problems by not getting pregnant.  Now that I’ve had another non-pregnancy related episode, I think the doctors may be correct in assessing that I am going to have long term issues with this and it probably has substantially limited my life span - to put it quite bluntly.  I realize only God is in control of that issue, but there is only so much a body can take. I think if I hadn’t had pain medicine five years ago to alleviate some of the pain I was in, my body would have shut down then. It is astonishing how much pain blood clots cause.

So I am very depressed. Â I’m frustrated. Â I’m mad. Â I’m sad. Â I’m trying to deal with the pain and also all the emotional issues I’m dealing with. Â I want to live. Â I want to raise my children. Â I want to travel to Europe with my husband one day. Â I want to be a good friend and a great writer. Â There is so much more to write, to do, to see, to enjoy. Â I told you before that my life has been more full since I had Hannah just because I do LIVE like I’m dying. Â Perhaps God wanted to remind me to live like that again and perhaps others around me might appreciate their lives just a teeny bit more when they realize that it could all be taken away. Â People NEED to live fully while they can. Â It’s a waste not to do so.

….

I had to stop writing after that because the pain was bad and I needed to rest, as I do now as well. I’ll try to put another update on this later, but for now, I can say that I serve a mighty God and if I can glorify him in some way through this suffering, then I consider it a blessing that I’ve been allowed to do so. It is horrible and I don’t “like” it, but at the same time I am willing to be a part of God’s plan no matter what the cost. So little is asked of us and we are spoiled or possibly just complacent, but when something like this happens, we really have a choice - are we going to give glory to God, who is still the same today as He was last week before I found out that I still have the problems OR are we going to curse the creator and question why we’re sick. I have simply chosen the first option. God has allowed this to happen for a reason.

Sonya

www.thehomeschooladvocate.com

Friendship in a Pile of Produce

On our local homeschool digest (e-mail tree), we post all sorts of information of interest to homeschool families. One of my favorite bits of information is a list of weekly store ads. A local mom goes through all the store fliers for the week and forwards those to me, then I post them to the digest. I’ve had increasing problems with my digestive system all fall and a few weeks ago, I posted a note asking if anyone was aware of sales on citrus fruit, particularly grapefruit and oranges, that I would appreciate it if they would post this on the digest.

I received a few responses to my post, but then the next week I got to the point where I could barely eat anyway. Then, last week I was put in the hospital so eating wasn’t really an issue at all. Before I was discharged from the hospital, one of my best friends started arranging for people to bring meals to our house so that I wouldn’t have to cook when I came home.

Apparently several of the people remembered my request for citrus foods because when I came home from the hospital, my kitchen counter looked like a mini-produce market! I had apples, oranges, grapefruit, grapes, and bananas across the counter top. It was so wonderful! The casseroles that we’ve received have been absolutely delicious, but I haven’t been able to eat much of those. Chris and the children have greatly enjoyed them, though! Each evening since I’ve been home, I have eaten one or two grapefruits and / or an orange. For some reason it doesn’t fill me up like other food - because it’s mostly liquid, I guess - but it forces my digestive system to function. Yeah!

I was just sitting here thinking about how friendship is shown in so many forms and it can even be evident through a pile of produce.

Sonya
www.thehomeschooladvocate.com

Greater to Give than Receive…

The other day I was driving down the road thinking about all the difficulty we’ve been having and also about so many other families in need. I’ve never seen so many requests for help on the homeschool digest and on other e-mail loops I read. There are MANY needs this year and these aren’t minor needs, but families who are losing their homes or who are in danger of losing their homes, who can’t pay to heat their homes, who can’t afford food due to rising costs, etc. Many of you understand. Anyway, I was driving down the road on my way to work (Chris was off that day so he was watching the children) and I passed a man and a little girl walking along the road. I heard that little voice inside of me saying “Stop and offer them a ride.” Now this isn’t something I normally do, but I learned a long time ago to obey the voice. God saved my life once through that voice, but I won’t share that story here. Some of you have heard it, but it was TRULY a miracle and I believe it was either an angel or the voice of God himself.

So anyway, I stopped the van, backed up, and asked if they wanted a ride. The man hesitated and then said, “It’s a really long way to our home. If you could just take us a short distance, I would appreciate it.” I said, “Absolutely not. You hop in and it would be my pleasure to take you all the way home.”

I always have extra car seats in our vehicles so we buckled the little girl in and the man got in on the other side. I looked back at this adorable child, whose hair was brushed and who was probably cleaner than my children, but whose clothes were a bit dirty and she was missing one glove. We were driving along and he asked me to stop at the gas station so that he could put some gas in my car because it was “a really long way,” but I told him not to worry about it. I told him that I had some very good friends who had helped me out recently and I really felt that God wanted me to give him a ride and not worry about the money.

He said, “Well, I’m very thankful, ma’am. I was a little worried about how I would get home by 3:30. I have to be there when the bus comes or they won’t let my son off the bus because he’s in kindergarten and someone has to meet the kindergartners or they won’t let them off.” Now it was around 12:30 when I picked them up so I was wondering how far away they actually lived. I was also wondering if he had to meet the bus every day so I said, “Is your wife working? Do you take turns meeting the bus depending on who is off work?”

“My wife is deceased, ma’am,” he replied. I quickly glanced at the little girl because I was wondering what her reaction would be to this statement, but she was already sound asleep.

I changed the subject and asked him why they were out walking in the cold rain. (It was drizzling last Thursday when I picked them up.) He said that he had taken his daughter to Northside Hospital because she had been sick for a few days and couldn’t seem to get over it. She had been diagnosed with an upper respiratory infection and after he went to the pharmacy to pick up the medicine, his car wouldn’t start. I picked him up a couple of blocks from the pharmacy.

It was almost 15 miles to his apartment. We chatted the entire way. He was a very polite, friendly man and we discussed several things, including where he went to church, the economy, and how he had moved here earlier this year because he had heard that the job market was better here than in Virginia. He is a tailor by trade, but he came here to work in a factory because when the recession began, he said it was kind of difficult to get a job as a tailor any more. He moved here for a factory job and worked three months, but when the layoffs began in earnest a couple of months ago, he was among the first laid off since he was new.

I asked if he had any other children besides the little girl, who had just turned four, and the six-year-old boy. He also has 9 and 12-year-old girls. We arrived at his home about this time and I asked him if he needed anything. I was thinking of the money I had in my purse that had been given to us because we are having such a difficult time. I didn’t want to give it away. I had plans for it, after all. I asked if they had food and he told me that they did.

I drove away and cried the entire way to work. I worked for a couple of hours, but I couldn’t get this family off my mind. I had made him give me his phone number and I had taken his number, too. I told him that if he had any difficulty getting his car, he should call me and I would do what I could to help him. I also told him I’d check up on him to see if he needed anything so I called him that evening and asked if he really had everything he needed. Bills? He said they’d be ok. Food? They have food stamps. Clothing? He said they get hand-me-downs and buy other stuff at the Salvation Army so they were fine. Christmas gifts? He said he saved some of the money from his last paycheck to buy the children each a gift and he was going to do that, but if I could possibly give him a ride to town to buy the gifts, he would appreciate that since he doesn’t know if his car would be fixed before Christmas. I told him I had been given some money and I would like to buy the children’s stocking stuff, like toothbrushes, toothpaste, candy, and some other little stocking things. And I asked if they needed anything for winter like gloves (since the little girl only had one on). He said, “OH YES! If you could just do that, I would be so appreciative. The children could really use some gloves.”

My children, two of my friend’s children (who were spending the weekend) and I went out on Friday and spent about $50 on each child. We had a lot of fun and bought them things that many people would take for granted or at least not consider a huge treat, but that these children will probably really appreciate - a new toothbrush, your own tube of toothpaste, some little kids’ hand gel, a slinky, gloves, winter hats, etc. Our children greatly appreciate these things because they are a treat they receive at Christmas so we bought the children all the things we usually put in our own stockings and my children had great fun being the “givers” rather than the “receivers.”

It may seem that I have wasted the money I was given, but I didn’t. I can’t imagine why in the world God would send that money my way and then place someone in such need right in my path if he didn’t want me to share it with them. It’s not just about the money, after all. I’m going to take the dad Christmas shopping this week. (We don’t have any more money, but I’ll give him a ride! :) We’re also inviting them over for Christmas Eve. His children are in such close age to ours and it would be a joy to have them visit. Perhaps we can develop a relationship, even a friendship with this family. That’s certainly worth much more than the $200 we spent.

And I’m not worried about our bills any more. You know, I think the reason I cried so much after I dropped this man off is because Chris was almost left raising five young children a few years ago. If that had happened, or even if it happened tomorrow, I know my husband would not ask for help. If he were walking along the side of the road with Hannah and someone picked them up, he would insist on giving them gas money, whether he had it to offer or not. It’s just the man he is. And this man was laid off at the same time as my aunt, brother and uncle. It all just seemed a bit too coincidental and a bit overwhelming. So many people hear of others needing help, but I grew up without a home most of the time. I’ve been homeless and without food and I don’t want to be in that position again, but that is selfish. The Lord knows our needs and he never fails to meet them.

I have been sick all weekend as my immune problems are seriously acting up again. I’ve pretty much felt awful this entire fall, and I’ve been having fevers off and on again for a couple of weeks and this weekend I had severe headaches. A little over a week ago I also started having some horrible side effects to my medicine that I won’t even mention here. It’s very depressing and draining on my system. However, I am VERY happy. I will not ask for help again. I appreciate the help we received during the past few weeks and we will continue to look for wood, but the encounter with this man reminded me once again that we are only worrying about our bills and my health. There could be so much more to worry over, but we serve an awesome God and even if we lost everything we own, we STILL would serve an awesome God. He doesn’t change and I believe the lesson in all this is that nothing on this earth really matters except what we do with what we have (are we willing to share what we’ve been given to someone who needs it even more?) and what we do with what we KNOW (are we willing to share the gospel with those who may not have a relationship with the savior?).

I’m sorry this is long. I figure since I haven’t written much in the past couple of weeks, I could make up a tiny bit. I also wanted to give everyone an update and encourage you this holiday season to share with someone in need. Many of you are. Some of you have so little to share in material terms, but you can share the GOOD NEWS. Others sit on thrones of judgment and offer nothing to those who they believe have gotten themselves into the situation and should get themselves out. It is good to know that most of the people who will read this fall into the first two categories.

I’m sure most of you have heard of many cases of need this year in your community, through your church, etc. Many of the people in greatest need don’t go to church. They think “those people” (Christians) judge them and they aren’t “good enough” to go to church. Reach out to these people, too. They are perhaps in the greatest need because they don’t have a church to offer them material help, but also they don’t have the Lord to provide comfort. Find them. Pray for them. Look for them. Trust me, if you are willing to reach out to them, God will place them in your path, even if it means that he has to put them right beside your vehicle on a drizzly day on the side of the road. If you are willing, He will give you an opportunity to serve Him.

I pray that all of you who are worrying right now about bills, the economy, relationships, your job, etc. will find peace this holiday season. I also hope that you will have many opportunities to share with others this Christmas and throughout the coming year. It truly is a blessing to be able to give something to someone else, whether it’s a ride, a new toothbrush, or a simply a bit of friendship.

In Christ,
Sonya Haskins