10 September 2014
Customer Service
Dear Sibelius Support Techs,
Thanks to you both, from the bottom of my heart, for spending nearly an hour each on my problem yesterday. I know it's your job, and you probably get paid by the hour, but still. Thanks.
You didn't have to be nice about it, but you were. It didn't turn out to be an easy fix, and I'm sure you could have chosen to be frustrated instead.
Thanks for trying everything until it worked. Thanks, first guy, for trying to call back when we got cut off. Thanks, second guy, for picking up seamlessly from where the first guy left off, and carrying it through to completion.
When my husband came home? And found out you were at that very moment putting the finishing touches on his most beloved and necessary specialized computer program? And he realized he'd be able to use it again right away?
He was overwhelmed by a flood of relief.
I know I said thanks on the phone, but since we all call you when we're already frustrated, maybe you don't hear it often enough. I just wanted you to know, on the day after when everything is working well and we're up and running again, I haven't forgotten.
I'm still grateful for everything you've done.
Sincerely,
That Lady who Took up a Ton of Your Time Yesterday
17 June 2014
There's Always Time for Praising God
I did a little math today. You know how people say you'll never use math again once you're out of school? They're wrong. I use it all the time, in lots of different ways.
The kind of problem I did today was a simple percentage calculation.
I wanted to know, out of the 49 verses in Daniel chapter 2, how many were dedicated to Daniel's prayer of thanksgiving once he had the same vision Nebuchadnezzar had seen, and on top of that the interpretation of it.
The prayer begins in verse 19 through verse 23, which makes five verses. Therefore, out of the chapter's 49 verses, this prayer takes up slightly more than ten percent (a tithe, if you will) of the chapter.
While I'm certainly not here to offer a formula for how often and how much of our time we ought to budget for praising God, I do find it interesting that such a significant portion of an already lengthy chapter would be dedicated to heart-felt thanks.
Why?
Because if it were me, knowing that my ability to tell the king his dream and its interpretation directly influenced my immediate longevity and that of my colleagues, I would be tempted to say thank you later. You know, after I had gone to the king to save my life.
But Daniel doesn't. Death has already knocked at his door, but he's in no hurry. He gives thorough praise to the God who reveals secrets before he goes out the door to accomplish his mission.
In my own tendency to rush to and through the to-do list without stopping for breath let alone thanks, I could take yet another lesson from Daniel, don't you think?
25 October 2013
Bless the Lord, O My Soul (A Habit for Day 25)
15 October 2013
Things to Memorize (A Habit for Day 15)
- Bible promises. Keep them short if memorizing is hard work for you, or keep a journal where you write down in your own handwriting the most meaningful ones to you. Then you can read a book straight through of promises you've claimed for yourself personally. Trust me, it's hard to be discouraged after a few minutes of pure Bible promises! Some of the most powerful are the shortest, so memorizing a few is doable for just about anybody. Need wisdom? James 1:5. Need guidance? Psalm 32:8. Need hope? Jeremiah 29:11.
- Experiences you've had where God has clearly blessed your life. Write them down in story form and share them with family or friends, if appropriate. Write them down in list form, and keep the list where you have easy access to it and can review it when you're tempted to think God has left you alone.
- Hymns. Words are almost always more catchy if they come with a tune. Choose some songs you already love. You can also choose from different topics, such as praise, prayers for help or guidance, what Jesus did on the cross, the second coming, or heaven.
17 April 2013
Day is Dying
And it's beautiful. This sunset closes a day of blessings: being paid to plant flowers, teaching, seeing students progress, having my husband home for supper, walking with a friend in the cool of the evening, seeing amazing in the Bible things I hadn't noticed before.
What are the delights from your day?
21 January 2013
Five Years Ago Today
I thought it would be fun to take a quick snapshot of my life then, compared with my life now. After all, half a decade can bring a lot of change!
Back then, I was working as an administrative assistant. I sometimes longed to earn my living from something "more creative", but was constantly reminded how much I was learning and growing in the field I was in. {Now I wouldn't trade it for anything.}
Now, I work as a piano teacher (taught seven lessons today, and loved every minute--wish I had more!) as well as a housewife.
Back then, I had many friends who were housewives. I knew they kept busy. I know how busy there were now because I have time to carry the load of running the household smoothly. I barely keep up! But I love the opportunity to more carefully plan for meals and errands and laundry and summertime gardening.
Back then, I volunteered a lot at my local church. I played the piano for services, organized everything musical, and even sat on the church board as clerk.
Now, I haven't managed to volunteer at my new church much. I frequently travel with my husband's music groups, and I was asked today to play the piano for a children's Sabbath school when I can. I'm excited to re-enter the church-involvement part of my life back then that I loved so much.
Back then, I wondered if God was planning to unite my life to a husband.
Now, I see how brilliant His plan really was, and my appreciation for His leading and the man He put in my life daily grows.
Back then, I lived in a little rented three-bedroom house across the street from my office. It had two apartments in the basement, and some flower beds out front that I used for my vegetable and flower garden.
Now, I live in a bigger house {my husband keeps saying we should fill it up with children...} that has a wonderful kitchen and a great big garden out back. Rather than a busy street out front, we have a quiet neighborhood to live in, and an orchard behind our large back yard and garden.
Back then, I was within four driving hours of my parents and brother.
Now, I am thousands of miles away from my family AND my in-laws. {Sometimes sacrifices must be made to follow the will of God and work in the harvest fields.}
Back then, I didn't dream of getting any more education. Life was providing me with enough of that.
Now, I am blessed to have my master's degree. I would have been the last one to guess it, but I'm grateful every day for the learning, experiences, and people God put in my life via graduate school.
Back then, I didn't have a camera, and I didn't include many photos in my sporadic posts.
Now, my goal is to invite you here for new words and photos more and more often, with a constant desire to grow as a woman of God, as well as to bless you, my readers.
Thank you for stopping by today for a visit. I hope you'll stick around for my next five years!
20 January 2013
Something Written Just for Me
You've had that experience. You pick up a book, or something inspired, or the Bible itself. You read right along, everything making a distant sort of sense, and it happens.
The words jump out at you as if someone knew your innermost self ~ needs, desires, fears, joys ~ and right then, every word is just for YOU.
It happened to me this evening. I saw how I like to have my all under control. I saw how God has tested me and taught me to trust more deeply. I saw how I still need to learn that I dare not rely on myself for what I need (but on Jesus instead). I saw how well He knows my heart.
"Many have such a constant care for themselves that they give God no opportunity to care for them. If they should be a little short at times, and be brought into strait places, it would be the best thing for their faith. If they would calmly trust God, and wait for Him to work for them, their necessity would be God's opportunity; and His blessing in their emergency would increase their love for Him, and lead them to prize their temporal blessings in a higher sense than they have ever done before.". (Testimonies for the Church vol. 2 p. 657)
I look over my experience during the last few years, and see how the hand of God has been doing just that for me, for my naturally-worrisome heart.
And I praise Him, right now, publicly, for what He has done and is doing to help me grow.
03 January 2013
How to Write a Meaningful Thank-you Note
If you’re like me, you grew up in a home where your mother encouraged you to write thank-you notes for everything. Maybe you also have a mother who writes the kind of thank-you notes that people keep for their whole lives, but who thinks her notes are kept not so much because they are amazing (I’m guessing they are), but also because not enough people write thank-you notes.
What to say in a meaningful thank-you note
- Always be specific. Don't make the recipient wonder if you sent the note to the right person.
- When you’re writing a thank-you for a gift, mention the gift specifically, and write a sentence or two about how you've used and enjoyed the gift. Example: I’ve enjoyed the flowers you sent so much. I’ve been longing for spring, and these were just the spot of color I needed on a cold winter day.
- When you’re writing a thank-you note for money, tell the giver what you plan to do or what you’ve done with the money they gave. Example: Thank you for the check you sent. I’m excited to put it toward the fabric I need to finish my quilt. I can’t wait to send you a picture when it’s finished.
- Follow those principles for writing thank-you notes for acts of service.
- Mention something you love and appreciate about the person. Example: The way you're always ready to spend time on the people you love is such an inspiration to me, and you've inspired me to be more available to the people I love as well.
- Tell the person a few things that are happening in your life, especially if it’s a relative or friend you don’t connect with often. Example: Remember that rose garden we visited together last summer? I just took my mom there, and she loved it just as much as you did.
Thoughtful presentation
- Keep pretty paper (appropriate for masculine and feminine recipients) on hand, so you don’t delay your note by needing to go to the right store and find the right thing.
- Hand-written notes, sent through the mail, are becoming a rarity. Your thank-you notes in your own handwriting will therefore send not only your thanks, but that the gift or act prompting the note was meaningful enough to you to invest the time in energy in writing a classy note.
- And do make sure you spell the recipient's name correctly!
05 November 2012
The Bag on the Doorstep: Thank you, Pathfinders
20 April 2012
Two Weeks Until Recital
01 October 2011
Sabbath Blessings (So Far)
I walked over the bridge, and saw that the trees and the river looked something like the picture above. In the store, I found apples, spaghetti sauce, some bird seed. I thought I had a little left to spend, so I set out in search of tofu.
But instead of tofu, what should I find but half-gallon canning jars! Right then and there I knew I needed a cart! This size of canning jar is not quite easy to find in our little Michigan town and the surrounding area, and with plans to make apple juice in a week or two, I could not pass these up even though I knew I would need to spend more money than originally planned.
On my way back, I ran into another canning friend who I knew had been searching and searching for this particular kind of jar.
"They have half-gallon jars!" I gleefully announced, and we both went straight to them, loaded our carts, and went our separate ways.
I checked out, paying for everything including my four boxes of jars. Only as the bagger began loading everything back into my cart did I realize my dilemma.
"Oh, no! I didn't bring my car, and I don't know how to get everything home!" I blurted.
I stood there sheepishly wondering what I was going to do. I didn't see my fellow jar buyer anywhere in the near vicinity. My husband would be in the middle of practicing with the other musicians, so I couldn't call him. The bagger was telling me I could leave the jars at the store and come right back to get them. But he didn't understand. My car wasn't waiting for me at home. If I tried to walk home and back, it would take me at least four trips to get everything taken care of. And I couldn't even make one return trip before sundown.
I looked toward the store entrance right at the same moment that two musicians came through the door. Friends! I knew they would have come in at least one car if not one car each. I knew they would rescue me.
Sure enough, I waited for the one to finish her purchases. She drove me home, helped me carry in my boxes of jar-treasure. I sent her away with a plate of supper. And she laughed at me (well, with me, I suppose, since I was laughing at me too).
Then followed a quiet evening, with reading, conversations with my mom and one sister-in-law, a long warm bath. My husband came home to a tower of boxes beside the couch, and he was overjoyed to learn that we now had vessels for the apple juice we're longing to make.
And we've had other Sabbath blessings as the morning came and turned to afternoon:
- Hearing voices of loved ones living continents away from me
- Hearing voices read and share what they have learned from group Bible study
- Hearing voices of husband and the choir he is in making music during the worship hour
- Sitting with young friends while their parents and my husband sang in choir
- Seeing the sunrise, and a cloudless sky
- Seeing a cardinal in our bush, eating its berries
- Seeing a friend from far away, who is here for a family visit as well as business
- Feeling the warmth of the heater on my feet
- Smelling food warming up in the oven, which we will also soon taste
- Tasting barley crackers, sent to us from Mom in Oregon
08 September 2011
- The best husband ever
- Excellent teachers
- Friends new and old
- A new niece
- Tasty food
- Amish country and farms
- Piano lessons full of new insights into the physicality as well as musicality of being a pianist
- A second year of Analytical Techniques, just for fun
- New insights in the Bible after I asked God to help me understand
- Cheerful, sturdy clothing
- Our crockpot
- Prayer time alone and with my husband
- Feeling healthy and energetic
- Getting more exercise
- Starting the second year of the master's program instead of the first, and having many familiar things in life where last year at this time almost everything was unfamiliar
May God grant each of you, dear readers, the sweetest of His blessings this week.
08 December 2009
Frozen Flowers
I received an e-mail this morning with these excellent words in it:
"When the mustard seed is cast into the ground, the tiny germ lays hold of every element that God has provided for its nutriment, and it speedily develops a sturdy growth. If you have faith like this, you will lay hold upon God’s word, and upon all the helpful agencies He has appointed. Thus your faith will strengthen, and will bring to your aid the power of heaven. The obstacles that are piled by Satan across your path, though apparently as insurmountable as the eternal hills, shall disappear before the demand of faith. 'Nothing shall be impossible unto you.'" Desire of Ages-431
What are the nutriments my faith is grasping hold of?
Giving thanks in all things, for this is God's will for me in Christ Jesus:
- the prayers of a faithful beau
- normal lab results from the doctor
- stress (all things--God would not bid us be thankful for that which would do us harm)
- lists
- my new shower (still a blessing)
- my job
- friends' e-mails
- the blessing of fellowship
- the promise and gift of the Holy Spirit
- this post, reminding me of my own reading a few days ago of John 16:20-22: http://www.aholyexperience.com/2009/12/its-part-of-receiving-gift.html
- remembering that God's plans are the best plans
- looking, with the eye of faith, to Jesus as my Shepherd, myself the helpless sheep, trusting myself to His care, always
- exercise, even in the bitter cold
- a quiet morning
- friend's first grandbaby born early this morning
- praying friends
- frozen flowers, although left in the car too long in the cold, still bring cheer at the thought I was thought of
- my hymnbook, propped up in the towell cupboard, easily viewed and sung from while my blow dryer joined the tunes
08 July 2009
Health of Body and Soul
"No tongue can express, no finite mind can conceive, the blessing that results from appreciating the goodness and love of God." The Ministry of Healing, p253
...fixing their minds upon cheerful things...
"We are in a world of suffering. Difficulty, trial, and sorrow await us all along the way to the heavenly home. But there are many who make life's burdens doubly heavy by continually anticipating trouble. If they meet with adversity or disappointment, they think that everything is going to ruin, that theirs is the hardest lot of all, that they are surely coming to want. Thus they bring wretchedness upon themselves, and cast a shadow upon all around them. Life itself becomes a burden to them. But it need not be thus. It will cost a determined effort to change the current of their thought. But the change can be made. Their happiness, both for this life and for the life to come, depends upon their fixing their minds upon cheerful things. Let them look away from the dark picture, which is imaginary, to the benefits which God has strewn in their pathway, and beyond these to the unseen and eternal." (The Ministry of Healing, 247-248)
26 January 2009
Nearly to One Thousand



No. No, for I have discovered that God Himself won't stop at one thousand, or two thousand, or three thousand. No, for my heart is more awake now than ever. No, for the more my heart can see, the more it begs to see, the more thankful it is for the vision.
His gifts are endless, and even the efforts to write them down reveal to me how impossible it would be to document the mercies of our God.
"And there are also many other things that Jesus did, which if they were written one by one, I supose that even the world itself could not contain the books that would be written. Amen." (John 21:25)
24 December 2008
Blessing in Disguise
Checking the clock and cancelling my appointment, I called a farmer friend to see if there was any hope of my driving. Yes, of course there was. Never underestimate the ways of a farmer with a troubled engine.
Still, we both agreed: the time had come to take the car to the doctor to see what was the matter. Further discussion with my father brought the matter even closer. Why wait until Friday when I could leave the car at the shop first thing the next morning?
As the car warmed the next morning, a thought was planted in my mind: Load the snow tires in the car now, while you wait, so you don't have to do it on Friday.
This done, I drove the half mile or so to the shop, dropped off my car, and walked to work. It would need to wait there while the engine got cold enough for them to observe the problem. I would not need the car for a few more days.
Over the next two days, so much snow fell that if my car had sat at home, I would have been entirely snowed in. If I had not loaded the snow tires in the car, there was no way I could have had them changed at all by the time I needed them. By now the problem is fixed and my snow tires are securely on the vehicle. Since then, I have not even parked the car in my own driveway for fear of getting stuck, parking instead across the street that gets plowed.
Before I called, my Father in heaven answered my needs, working my car problem into great blessing.
02 October 2008
Counting Them

15 September 2008
Savoring

448. The flower-bearer, who has brightened my office many times, welcoming me into her world and introducing me to as many of her acquaintances as possible.
450. Invitations, even when I can't accept them.
453. Crafting, creating, sharing, eating, analyzing in the midst of a farm with another dear friend.
454, 455. A full moon in the east on the night's drive home, and the same full moon in the west on the morning's brisk walk.
23 August 2008
Every Perfect Gift
"Every perfect gift comes from above, from the Father of lights..."
278. Birthday roses from coworkers
282. Drivers' license renewed, on the last possible day
283. Children's hands in mine as our feet feel the way up and down a creek
284. Yard sale sewing machine
287. Ladies picnic, complete with dresses and hats
292. Brake warranty
294. Morning thunder storm, afternoon rain
295. Last hug from friend before she moved away
296. Small town living: package delivered to my office in the morning rather than to my house across the street to be found in the evening
302. Birds singing, as well as frogs
305. Peace in sacrifice
309. Time and place to pick blueberries
312. Church family praying together every day
315. Dancing water in ancient Chinese bowl (OMSI)
335. Cool morning breezes in July, worthy of a sweatshirt
338. Ants in my house...in all things give thanks
341. News of a new person
349. Garden cucumbers and tomatoes
360. Letter from my high-school prayer partner
361. Three moments talking to a bird on the ledge outside my window
363. Cayenne pepper in my sliced finger, stopping the bleeding
367. Business meeting hosted by committee members in their lakeside cabin
377. Looming haircut appointment
394. Box--yes, a whole box--of tomatoes
397. Safe city driving (this small-town, country girl finding her way)
399. Weariness meeting mattress and pillow
401. Generous mother
408. Abundance of water, filling bathtub