Friday, April 6, 2018

March 9, 2004- CHOOSE LIFE!


March 9, 2004 changed my life forever. Before I go into that day, I have to tell you what lead up to this day because it is just as important! This blog entry will go into the darkest time of my life and I tell it because it is so important.. even if it reaches one person. Several years later, it is a story that still reaches people and helps them choose life.

I turned 14 in May of 2003. I won't into the why but that summer I because extremely suicidal. I was even suicidal at the Turner Syndrome Conference that summer in Orlando. I started 8th grade that fall. I started having seizures nonstop and my depression went even deeper. Between my depression and seizures, I could not attend school full time and was almost kept in 8th grade and almost placed on in in-home instruction. On December 2, 2003 I was in the ER all day, When I got home I went into a total meltdown and telling my mother "I just want to die!" over and over.

Three months later, my Grandfather completed suicide. I will never for anything that happened that day. Getting home from school and Mom saying she had to check on Grandpa because Dad had not heard from him all day and it was out of character. I remember the Police Officer knocking on our door to check on my brother and I who were minors at the time and to make sure someone would be with us soon. I remember picking up the phone and Mom telling me to put my brother on. I remember him talking to her and will never forget how he handled me so well. He said "No! No! No!' to Mom so I knew something was very wrong. He told me to sit down and said "Grandpa killed himself this afternoon." I will NEVER forget what he said to me to after that most importantly. It still  speaks to me today. It was like God speaking through him. He told me. "Stop! I know what you are thinking! Stop!" (he knew I was thinking if Grandfather could kill himself so can I) "You have something that Grandpa did not have. You have hope!" I will NEVER forget that. 

His decision to complete suicide is what ultimately drove me to CHOOSE LIFE! It took a LONG TIME. I had so many people praying for me. They prayed I'd choose life, see the light, and also find my way back God (I turned my back on Him the summer of 2003). I started attending Youth Group at a new church which I'd attend until I was 28. I would attend Winter Retreat in West Virginia with them and 600 other teens all 4 years of High School. Those 4 Winter Retreats changed everything for me more then all my appointments with my psychiatrist. My last Winter Retreat in 2008 when I was a Senior was the one that brought about total healing for me. I didn't spend too much time with my youth group that weekend because after the first service we had I knew I needed to be alone and figure things out, let go of anger over my seizures, and just had a lot to work through. I remember coming home and feeling a freedom I had not felt in 4 years. One of my classmates even commented on my demeanor the next day.  

My Grandfather's decision made me see what would happen to my family if I went through with my plans and I knew I simply could not do it and 2 months after his suicide when I turned 15 and survived the most awful year of my life and wasn't even sure I'd see 15, I knew I had chosen life for good! The depression and seizures were still there. I still had see my Psychiatrist often. I have not been off an anti-depressant since I was 14. 

Because I chose life  I graduated from high school. I have been able to travel a lot and see friends around the country. I graduated from College with honors. I got to meet my nephew last year! I learned how to cook. I work full time in my field. I have been able enjoy so much all because of 2 simple words... choose life! That's literally all it takes. 

I hope you never have to learn things the way I did. I hope you never have to go through everything I went through that horrible year This story does have take-aways though no matter who you are.

1) You matter to people more than you know.
2) There are so many blessing in every day life. 
3) Healing is slow sometimes but it is there.
4) Hope is always there and comes from people you least expect it. 
5). Choosing life is an every day decision and life is more then just getting through the day. Life is inside us, it is in the blessings, it's in those quiet moments and family noisiness! It is in the mundane and extraordinary! 


Saturday, March 31, 2018

Bangor Chronicles: Swimming


My mother and I took adult swimming lessons for five weeks. It was a lot of fun. I learned how how to the breaststroke and mastered my freestyle and backstroke. My breaststroke is a work of a progress but it is correct. Just need to build up my endurance.

One thing I learned is that with swimming, muscle memory is hard to accomplish but is very important. It is hard to change something you have doing different from what the stroke calls for. Knowing what you are supposed to do and having the timing is hard.

When we think about life, we need a form of muscle training. We need to remember the right path to go and not depart from it. More and more, sin is becoming normalized. We rationalize our sins so we can keep on doing what we are doing. We want to continue doing what we are doing and because sin makes us feel guilty, we lighten it up to make us not feel guilty.

Where does being complacent and not remembering the things we are supposed to get us? NO WHERE! When we swim the wrong way, we are going to continue to swim the wrong way. The longer we swim the wrong way, the harder it is to learn a better way to swim- the right way.

Just like our muscles need to be trained to swim the right way- our heart and our minds need to learn to live the right way. How do we train our hearts and minds to go the way it should go? Some of it is basic common sense- going to church and praying. DISCLAIMER: I do not judge anyone who does not go to church and still share in the Christian faith. I believe it is more important to live out our faith and living for God then it is going Church  every Sunday. Church is only a building. Living it out is so much more important. Knowing where you are going is more important. Having friends to help retrain your muscles is important. It is important to train your mind using a part of Philippians 4 that tells us where we are suppose to focus.

Philippians 4:8 And now, dear brothers and sisters, one final thing. Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.

To be completely honest and transparent, I really struggle with this and I am really working on it. I have been negative about a lot of different things. I have become cynical about God. I have been seeing things through a worldly lens and have seeing things as coincidence instead of something that had been orchestrated by God.

We got to learn to swim the right way. We need to approach live the right way. We need to see sin as what it really is and not rationalize it and make excuses.  We need to train our minds so we can in the righteousness that we called to.




Friday, March 9, 2018

Bangor Chronicles- Zach gets Baptized!




On March 4, 2018 I had the honor and privilege of seeing my precious nephew Zachary get baptized! It was such a special day and he had the congregation laughing! As parents today, raising their children in the Christian faith is harder then ever. When parents like Zachary's have their child baptized or dedicated it is so refreshing. It gives hope to the world! One of the reasons I want to work at a Christian preschool one day is because of this. I want to support these parents and let them know that they are not alone. Zach has a family filled of faith and because of that Zach will know the way he should go. Proverbs 22:6 promises "Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it. (NLT). I know this is true because I was raised in a devout Christian home. As a child, I remember being in church every time the doors were open. I was a Deacon's kid and my whole world centered around Jesus Christ and the church. The hardest part of being raised in a home of faith like I was is is making faith our own and not something that becomes complacent. Going to church or believing in God simply isn't enough. We need to make it personal because God is personal God. I expect Zach will have issues in his walk because we all do. I will do my best to encourage him and help him understand faith means nothing if it is not personal. I want him to feel comfortable asking the hard questions about faith such as "Why do bad things happen to good people?" It is good and healthy to have these questions. These questions help us develop our worldview. An example of this concept is when we ask "Why does God allow bad things to happen?" We will be more prone to finding the answer, searching and seeing God in those situations. After 9/11 more people went to church then ever before to help them answer that question. People who are not Christians even ask these questions because whether they admit it or not they want know that there is a God who can meet them where they are and heal their wounds. This is why we saw an entire nation, an entire world, searching for God after 9/11. I want Zach to learn how to be a strong boy and men of faith in this world. I want him to see past the headlines. I want him to be secure enough in himself and his faith that he is not easily swayed by the actions of his peers. I want him to go by his own drum and know that if he loses friends in the process it is their loss. I am so blessed to have been raised in close-knit family filled of faith in which I learned how to make my faith my own and not just see is as part of my family. I think that is the most important thing Christian parents can teach their child- to make their faith own and not something that is just a part of their family. I am certain that this is how we will raise Zachary. The family raises the child with the parents! I am blessed to know the type of home my nephew will be raised. The way our parents raised us is being passed down because just like the verse in Proverbs, we didn't depart from it.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Bangor Chronicles: Disney








On February 5th, the folks, Bangor and I went to Disney World to celebrate my college graduation. On Monday we went to Magic Kingdom, on Tuesday we went to Epcot, on Wednesday, we went to Animal Kingdom, on Thursday we went to Universal Studios and back to Magic Kingdom. We did Avatar and it was worth waiting over 2 hours! We did the Seven Dwarfs Mine Ride, It's a Small World, Peter Pan's flight, Space Mountain, and so much more!

We stayed at the Art of Animation and it was great! We stayed in the Cars Family Suites and I had my own bedroom and bathroom which I really appreciated. It gave me some "me time" which I need. We did things differently then when my Mom and I went in 2015. We did not get the meal plan and had food delivered. This saved us a lot of money and I would recommend that families do it that way.  You eat what you want and not any more. You don't worry about losing money because you did not use a snack you were allotted or and stuff like that.

My favorite park is EPCOT. I really like the World Showcase, Soarin', Spaceship Earth, and the adorable Nemo ride. Soarin' was different from when my mother and I rode it in 2015 and we both thought was greatly improved. I particularly loved the different smells that were added. It added a whole other dimension. My mother and I did not like Animal Kingdom so much when we went in 2015 but we loved it this time as it had improved greatly and we spent more time there then we did the last time.

We did all the night shows at the different parks. It is really hard to say which one is the best because they are all so different. I loved  Illumination at Epcot. I will never forget the child near me pointing at the globe and literally named all the continents. I am 28 and I can't do that! I thought the fireworks at Magic Kingdom and thought that it has gotten much better.

I am so thankful to my folks for taking me. We had a great time! I could not stop thinking of little Zach and how I can't wait to take him when he reaches the perfect age!








Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Mentoring

Before I begin have two things to tell you! First off, if you like what you are reading please share! It would make it make my day! Secondly, next week my folks, Bangor  the Moose and I are going to Disney to celebrate my graduation which means there will be no blog next week. In 2 weeks I will begin a 4 week Bangor Chronicles series on each park so be on the look out for that.

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For the past three or four years I mentored two little girls in the Inner City. I was with one little girl for two or three years and another little girl for one year. I do not do it anymore but I learned some things along the way. The first thing I learned is selflessness when you would rather do something else. When we had mentoring during the winter months or if it was day it was raining it was much harder for me to go then when the sun is shining and the temps are terrific. When it is really cold and rainy, I would much rather stay home in the evening reading a book and watching TV. It is much harder going out on a night when it is cold  and dreary.

The second thing I learned was we are making a difference even when it feels we are not. Sometimes I felt especially with the girl I had for one year that I was not reaching her or that she thought positively about me as her Mentor. I will never forget when the little girl I had for two or three years painted a picture and wrote "I love Molly" on it more than once. I honestly didn't realize that or that I was making a difference in her life. I will never know how these two young ladies turn out. I know that whether or not I will see the results of my time with them that I made a difference in the time I did have with them. I really hope so!

I learned that we are not much different from the down and out. The kids in the mentoring program came from broken homes. Many were without fathers. It is easy judge families like theirs. I can honestly I did initially. The thing is we only a few bad decisions from being in their shoes. We have no room to judge when we come to realization we can easily be their shoes. We could lose our income and everything all too easily and then we learn how much like we all are. Tough times doesn't discriminate! It can hit anyone in the blink of the eye!

I learned how good it feels to get out of ourselves to help someone else. When I went to mentoring I knew it was not about me, it was about my child and helping her live up to her potential and support her. We live in a very self-absorbed society. I can personally attest to the fact the being self-absorb can lead to depression and anxiety. When we become self-absorb, we become insecure and we want to know what everyone thinks about us and if they think are fine. When we take our minds on ourselves and take time to help someone else, we find freedom! We realize in helping others that we feel less self-absorbed and thus less anxious and depressed.

Here are someways that we can help others. These are just a few! The list can go on much longer.

1) Volunteer
2) Send a card (NOT AN EMAIL OR TEXT) to someone you have not talked to for a long time.
3) If it is financially possible, sponsor a child. I have personally sponsored a child  through Compassion ever since 2013 and it has been a very positive and rewarding experience.
4) If you see someone who seems lonely or sad, reach out to them and start a conversation.
5) Take a meal to someone who is sick or is going through a stressful time.

In closing, how did you feel when someone reached out to? How did you feel when you were able to talk to them without a fear or being judged. What did you learn from the wisdom of someone? Do you remember what they said? Do you still live by the wisdom they imparted on you? What would it be like if someone felt that way about you? What can you do to that will make someone feel they can talk to without being judged? What can you do to kindly use what you learned to give them wisdom? How would you  feel if someone remembered you years from now just because you reached out to them with love and compassion? We may never see the impact we have- and maybe that is a good thing as a way to keep us humble. Just remember what you say, do, and thing matters everyday in much larger way then you imagine!


Tuesday, January 16, 2018

A Sad Trend


We all know millennials are leaving the church in droves. The church is having a hard time meeting the needs of this generation. My Pastor had started a new sermon series titled Courageous. The first Sunday he was preaching in this series, he gave us cold hard facts. He told us that recently there was a lunch of about 50 ladies and they all had adult children. When they were asked if their adult children attend the Church only 2 raised their hands.

Pew Research Center has an article title America's Changing Religious Landscape. It is it says "One of the most important factors in the declining share of Christians and the growth of the “nones” is generational replacement. As the Millennial generation enters adulthood, its members display much lower levels of religious affiliation, including less connection with Christian churches, than older generations." 


I am a 28 year old millennial and I have seen this as the total reality. I have been personally impacted by this trend. The Church has yet to learn how to reach out to this particular challenging generation. If it does not change, the ramifications can go much deeper. Some churches do\ well in reaching out to this challenging generation. Luckily I have found a church that is truly wonderful about it. People may say that it is not a problem but with that attitude can result in tragic outcomes- more tragic then we need can imagine. 

I believe there are many factors to this issues. I will name the first few that run off the top of my head. One is people in this generation haven't learned how to make their faith their own. They see it is something that their parents believe and it was simply how they were raised. Once they turn 18 because they haven't learned how to make their faith own they decide to leave. Churches don't make enough of an effort to reach out to people in this generation or they try but they could do more. They need to make programming available for this generation- even if there are not many millennials in a particular congregation. When they read in the bulletin that a Bible Study meets for people like us it sends this message... "This church cares about me. This church believes me." Churches need to do research on what  our needs are, what attracts us and what sets us off. The more churches learn about about us the more they will be able reach us where we are. Parents of kids through the age 17 need to help their child make their faith their own. They need to help them see it not just apart of what their family but a part of them as an individual. 

I truly believe it is not too late to change this sad tread. I do believe that we need to change this now before it will be too late. I believe the church needs to be courageous and stop being complacent. I believe we as a Nation needs to back it's Christian foundation and I believe that the millennials can lead that change but before that happens the Church needs to stands up! NOW! 

http://www.pewforum.org/2015/05/12/americas-changing-religious-landscape/







Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Comfortable In Your Own Skin?




One of my favorite TV shows is Full House. I own the whole series on DVD. I was watching an episode of Full House recently and the opening scene struck me in a way that never did before- maybe I was just being over-analytical that day. DJ and Stephanie fix up Michelle's hair so beautifully and tell her she is going to look beautiful for Grandma. They have her look in the mirror to see how she looks. When she sees herself in the mirror, they ask her how she looks. She replies "No good, I look like me!" then she picks up a blond wig and walks back to the mirror and says "Now I'm a movie star!

This is a simple scene that is suppose to be funny and  most people wouldn't read much into it but I couldn't help asking myself how many each of us do this every day. How many of us wish we were someone else and look in the mirror or at our current situations and say "No good, I look like me!" We may look in the mirror and see aspects of our physical appearance and do everything we can mask our imperfections. Or we can look at the mirror and see our circumstances and wish we are seeing in the mirror someone else- the person we wish we were. I look at the mirror and I see my circumstances. I wish I was not me and was someone else. I do not see myself for what I have accomplished but rather I compare myself to others. This adds to depression, anxiety and moments of extreme panic! When I read verses like Psalm 139: 14 that says  "Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex!Your workmanship is marvelous—how well I know it." I feel an emptiness and strong desire to believe it. How I desperately need and want to be there!

What about you? What makes you look in the mirror and say "No good, I look like me." What are you hiding behind all that makeup- internally and externally that you put on every morning? More importantly, what can you do to help you be able to say verses like Psalm 139:14 as a claim over your life- your birthright. In every essence, believing and claiming verses like Psalm 139:14 is our birthright. It is our destiny. It is our calling to live life claiming verses like that one but most of us resort to the makeup and hiding who we are. We don't feel good enough to be ourselves. We don't feel comfortable in our own skin. We wish we were anyone else but ourselves. Can you imagine how much better we would feel if we were comfortable to just be us? Content in the season of waiting? Content in your circumstances? I want that so badly for you and for me. It all starts with a choose to believe what we know to be true over our feelings. 

Romans 9:20-21 No, don’t say that. Who are you, a mere human being, to argue with God? Should the thing that was created say to the one who created it, “Why have you made me like this?” When a potter makes jars out of clay, doesn’t he have a right to use the same lump of clay to make one jar for decoration and another to throw garbage into?


Monday, January 1, 2018

Bangor Chronicles: Zachary


December 30, 2017        Bangor meets Zachary

One of the biggest blessings my family and I ever received entered our world and changed it forever on April 6, 2017. This is the day our Zachary King was born. He is an awesome little boy and I love him so much! He is meeting every developmentally milestone and in the 97% percentile for height and weight! When I think about my nephew there are several things I want him know. Several things I want him to understand. The biggest thing I want for him is to find a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and the faith of our family. I want him to learn how to make his faith his own so he doesn't see Christianity as something our family just does. I want to help him learn from my mistakes spiritually and emotionally so he doesn't have the same struggles I have. I want him to a ripple in the river of his peers that creates change. I want him to learn how to be a friend to everyone and how it is cool to reach out to the kid in the lunchroom sitting by themselves. I want him to have a heart of adventure! I want him to see, experience, and appreciate the beauty of our country. I want him to learn the beauty of hiking and simply being. I want him to develop a love of books. I want him to see how much reading can enrich his life. I want him to learn that if he isn't exactly good in one subject at school it doesn't take away from him and how special and unique he is. If he struggles, I will encourage him to not give up- that hard work pays off! I want him to be secure in himself so if a peer puts him down he is still standing simply because he knows who he is. I want him to learn each of us have things about us that make us different but at the end of the same we are all the same. I want him to know my whole story one day and have it resonate with him and stay with him. I want my story to show him diagnoses and what people say about us is not the end all. When we choose to take away those labels and lowered expectations we find freedom. When we choose to rise above our challenges than no one and nothing can hold us down. We just have to chose not to let those labels define us. I want Zachary to be a game-changer! I want him to choose happiness and choose life. I want him to choose freedom over chains. These are just of few of the things I want him to learn. I want Zachary to know that most of all I will never stop loving him even when he trips up on his journey.