The other night, a family invited into their home to break bread. While eating, the mother shared a lemonade story with me. She found out there was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for her seven-year-old daughter to win a scholarship to a special school equipped to handle visionaries.
A traditional public school would probably diagnose the young apprentice as autistic. Her mother chooses to embrace these signs as gifts and chooses to help her daughter fully embrace her God-given gifts.
The home-school teacher now working with the young apprentice was recently fired from public school. She helped the young apprentice with her home-made video. With your help and your daily vote (you can vote once every 24 hours), this young apprentice will make lemonade for the world. Please click on the link and help this writer who is already working on her first manuscript to make her dreams come true.
A collection of inspiring stories from people who turned life's lemons into delicious lemonade to be shared with the world.
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Young Apprentice Needs Your Vote to Make Lemonade
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Member of Men's USA International Tennis Team Rallies to Help Earthquake Victims in Christchurch, New Zealand
Leland Rolling with wife, Tracy. |
“GET THE KIDS!!!!” The scream came from the
other side of the hotel room. The noise around us was deafening… like
standing next to a speeding freight train as it passes a foot away. But I heard
the scream. For a flash I looked at the roof and the walls… they were
moving. Wood 2x4’s were starting to poke through and glass was
shattering. Cracks were moving up one side of the room. Pieces of the ceiling were
falling. I reached for both my boys, grabbed them, and tried to guide them
under a small computer table, having much difficulty because I really could not
stand or keep my balance. I knew Tracy was nearby and somehow we found
ourselves all huddled together… riding out the shaking.. for what seemed
like an eternity.
Members of the USA international tennis team enter center court. |
It was February 22nd 2011, 12:51PM (Feb 21st
here, 3:51PM). My wife Tracy and my two sons were in ChristChurch, New Zealand
for an International tennis competition. By virtue of my tennis achievements the
previous year, I had been selected to be part of the United States Team representing
our country in the World Tennis Championships. I decided to make the extra
expense and fly us all to New Zealand and stay for 10 days. A wonderful
family vacation, I thought.
The Rollings apartment near the epicenter. |
Hotel staff came immediately and told us to get out of the
room and out of the hotel. No time to think, just go. We were not fully dressed…
I had just come back from practice. No time to grab anything. Could be a gas
leak. Building could be on fire. So Tracy rushed the boys out and down a flight
of concrete stairs (thank God the stairs were in tact…could have been a
terrible situation). I grabbed only a few things and followed. Another 5.7
aftershock hit. Violent. Looked as if the street lights would flip over and the
100 year old trees in the park across the street would uproot.
A street view of Christchurch moments after the quake. |
As time passed (we spent a few hours in a Salvation Army
Refugee camp that had been set up, then met up with some other tennis players
who were playing an hour south of ChristChurch and had a hotel room), a few
days later we arranged our travel home and started to realize the impact this
was going to have on the people of the city. We were the lucky ones. Bruised,
battered, scared, tired, but going to get home eventually For the rest of the
people in ChristChurch, the nightmare was just beginning. Their Infrastructure
was destroyed – water, sewer, roads, phone, electricity.. all severely
damaged. Houses wiped out either completely or partially. 185 people dead, most
of them in two buildings that collapsed, one of which was a quarter-block from
our hotel.
The tennis courts were destroyed during the earthquake. |
But they are determined, many of them, to stay and rebuild.
The city has history and its people want that history to continue. ChristChurch
was (is) the second largest city in the country, next to Auckland. And the
people there want to see it thrive once again. They are kind people. Very
generous. Many of them came to the refugee camp and offered up their homes
(even if they were damaged) to people that day who had no place to go. And many
lost loved ones, family members, children.
We need to remember the people of ChristChurch. I am lucky
that my life continued after that day and I was able to come home to a roof,
and water, and food. Not everyone there has that luxury, even today.
____________________
Leland and his wife, Tracy, would like to rally your support to help the good people of Christchurch who are still dealing with numerous aftershocks, loss of power, and lack of funds one year after the quake. You can help these resilient people rebuild by sending your donation to one of the following support groups:
MatchPoint International - http:// matchpointinternational.org.
More direct links organizations in New Zealand providing relief - www.helpchristchurchnow.com.
Please share this story with a friend and help this community recover. Thanks for your support.
____________________
Leland and his wife, Tracy, would like to rally your support to help the good people of Christchurch who are still dealing with numerous aftershocks, loss of power, and lack of funds one year after the quake. You can help these resilient people rebuild by sending your donation to one of the following support groups:
MatchPoint International - http://
More direct links organizations in New Zealand providing relief - www.helpchristchurchnow.com.
Please share this story with a friend and help this community recover. Thanks for your support.
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Kelly Combs Makes Guacamole
Kelly Combs, Author, Speaker, Mother and Chef. |
Lemonade Story by Kelly Combs:
“Whatcha doing?” my sister
asked, her standard phone greeting.
“Just making some
guacamole.” I answered.
“What? Why?” Her surprise
was natural.
Growing up with a mentally
ill mother, dinner was often McDonalds, when we were lucky. Other times it was a cold hotdog. I remember the night my mom made
macaroni and cheese. It was the
standard blue box variety, but she had forgotten to cook the noodles. As she stirred the sauce into the
crunchy uncooked noodles, she realized her mistake and said, “I messed up the
dinner, you’ll have to make yourself something to eat.” She then went to
bed. I was left staring into a
nearly empty refrigerator, and eating yet another cold hotdog for dinner.
Consequently, I've never
been good at "domestic" stuff like cooking, cleaning, decorating, and
crafting. Without training, I was challenged in these areas. So I decided to
embrace my non-domestic ways. Me? Cook? Ha, never. I am woman, hear me roar! I
became part of the feminist movement that says I don't have to do these things.
But then something changed.
I joined a cooking co-op.
If I would cook dinner just 1 night a week, for myself & three other
families, then 3 nights a week I would have dinner delivered to me by another
family. To someone who hated (aka can't!) cook this was a dream come true. What
happened next was truly a surprise.
I had to meal plan. We set
our co-op calendar 3 months at a time, so I had to pull out cookbooks and
select meals. Once the calendar was set, grocery shopping was easier. And once
I started putting some real effort into my cooking, the compliments (from my
own family AND the other three families) started coming in! Soon I was buying
fun kitchen gadgets (did I say fun and kitchen in the same sentence?)
I can honestly say now, I
am a good cook. I can meal plan. I just had to learn how. I'm still not the
best at decorating, but I am learning. This is especially important now that I
have two daughters of my own.
Titus 2:3-5 says we older
women are to teach the younger women to be "busy at home." That means
cooking, cleaning, meal planning, decorating. I was never taught. But rather
than carry on this omission, I am now teaching my children the joys of things
like cooking.
Imagine my delight, when
my then 4 year old came up to me with her baby doll and stroller in tow, and a
backpack full of plastic food. She said, "It's my cooking co-op day."
She's 6 now, and enjoys helping in the kitchen. She doesn't enjoy helping
unload the dishwasher, but I am training her none-the-less, so she will never
be domestically challenged like I was.
When I received a co-op
meal that included salad items including onions, tomatoes, cilantro and an
avocado, I decided to use the leftovers to make some home-made guacamole. That’s when my sister called.
“We may not have had the
best childhood,” I told her, “But I don’t have to hold onto those years as an
excuse not to learn basic domestic skills. I am no longer stunted by those years.”
“I’m really proud of you,”
she said. I smiled at her
encouragement, then held back my laughter as I told her, “When life gives you
avocados, make guacamole!”
Blog: www.chattykelly.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/ chattykelly
Twitter: www.twitter.com/kellycombs
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