So glad that I didn't see the car until after I knew that Lee was OK. It made my stomach sick to see it. I can't even imagine what it would have looked like or what would have happened if he had been going faster than 40 miles an hour. He was getting on the on ramp at the time.
It made me think of a story that Lauren sent to me, I will share part of it hoping... that all of us can remember that our Heavenly Father is in charge, He is always watching over us. I know that is true! Below is part of the story!
It made me think of a story that Lauren sent to me, I will share part of it hoping... that all of us can remember that our Heavenly Father is in charge, He is always watching over us. I know that is true! Below is part of the story!
"Allow me to share with you an experience from my own boyhood. When I was 11 years old, my family had to leave East Germany and begin a new life in West Germany overnight. Until my father could get back into his original profession as a government employee, my parents operated a small laundry business in our little town. I became the laundry delivery boy. To be able to do that effectively, I needed a bicycle to pull the heavy laundry cart. I had always dreamed of owning a nice, sleek, shiny, sporty red bicycle. But there had never been enough money to fulfill this dream. What I got instead was a heavy, ugly, black, sturdy workhorse of a bicycle. I delivered laundry on that bike before and after school for quite a few years. Most of the time, I was not overly excited about the bike, the cart, or my job. Sometimes the cart seemed so heavy and the work so tiring that I thought my lungs would burst, and I often had to stop to catch my breath. Nevertheless, I did my part because I knew we desperately needed the income as a family, and it was my way to contribute.
If I had only known back then what I learned many years later—if I had only been able to see the end from the beginning—I would have had a better appreciation of these experiences, and it would have made my job so much easier.
Many years later, when I was about to be drafted into the military, I decided to volunteer instead and join the Air Force to become a pilot. I loved flying and thought being a pilot would be my thing.
To be accepted for the program I had to pass a number of tests, including a strict physical exam. The doctors were slightly concerned by the results and did some additional medical tests. Then they announced, “You have scars on your lung which are an indication of a lung disease in your early teenage years, but obviously you are fine now.” The doctors wondered what kind of treatment I had gone through to heal the disease. Until the day of that examination I had never known that I had any kind of lung disease. Then it became clear to me that my regular exercise in fresh air as a laundry boy had been a key factor in my healing from this illness. Without the extra effort of pedaling that heavy bicycle day in and day out, pulling the laundry cart up and down the streets of our town, I might never have become a jet fighter pilot and later a 747 airline captain.
We don’t always know the details of our future. We do not know what lies ahead. We live in a time of uncertainty. We are surrounded by challenges on all sides. Occasionally discouragement may sneak into our day; frustration may invite itself into our thinking; doubt might enter about the value of our work."
I loved this talk, I love the reminder it is to all of us to remember that God is in charge and sees our lives from the end to the beginning. How thankful we are that Lee is OK. Faith and courage = HOPE !
Good night dear friends!
You can read the whole story HERE:
"If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail. " ~Abraham Maslow
"The world is round and the place which may seem like the end may also be only the beginning." ~Ivy Baker Priest
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