UNWRITER Ron Berry

July 29, 2009

KC is the sunshine in my life

Filed under: twidget — unwriter1 @ 5:02 am

Kadence's independence outfit2Kc in chair

Kadence Callisa Berry (so far), is the light of my life. She was born January 26, 2009.  This young lady is my new lease on life. A little background may help here. Amber, her mother was born when I was in my early thirties.  She said she would never get pregnant because she refused to go through all that pain. At the age of 29, that c hanged.

mom and kadence

 

She’s single and has had her share of boyfriends, most of whom were just passing fancies. She got pregnant even though she used protection.  It was during this time and after she was pregnant that she met Jared. This guy fits in the family like a glove! When her due date approached, he took two weeks off work to spend with her. He stayed with Amber in her room at the hospital and was there to cut the cord. These new birthing suites are nice! He had a bed there also. I made it there very shortly after she was born. Her labor period was long, a touch over fifteen minutes. Next time she get’s pregnant, she better live across the street from the hospital.

Ok, I digress. Amber was born on January 15th. The boys Aaron and Kyle joined us four years later on January 27th. Kaydence wasn’t about to be left out of this January birthday rush. Jared and Amber aren’t married, yet. That’s why the last name confusion. Amber could not have picked a better person to be Kaydences dad.

This young lady is bright, cheerful and ahead of schedule. That is what Amber did. I guesss one might say I’m a bit proud of this young lady. Let me leave you wit a picture or two.

grandpa and kadencekadence and me at the hospital

July 28, 2009

When Someone You Love Has Cancer

Filed under: book tour — unwriter1 @ 4:54 am

when someone you love

Cancer. One of the deadliest words spoken in modern times. The disease and side effects of treatment break the hearts of onlookers, leaving caregivers and family members feeling helpless and useless in knowing how to help their loved ones.

 

Cecil Murphey, author of 90 Minutes in Heaven and a seasoned ghostwriter of more than 100 books, has written a loving inspirational book for cancer caregivers and family members. Cec isn’t new to cancer. His intimate care for his wife as she fought cancer is evident on the pages of this sweetly written book. From the cover of this beautifully illustrated book to the closing remarks, he guides caregivers through a gentle question and answer session. Prayers for difficult situations are scattered throughout the book and personal illustrations from cancer caregivers help validate and encourage readers. 

 

A Word from The Man Behind the Words

 

When Shirley walked in from the garage, she didn’t have to say a word: I read the diagnosis in her eyes. I grabbed her and held her tightly for several seconds. When I released her, she didn’t cry. The unshed tears glistened, but that was all.

I felt emotionally paralyzed and helpless, and I couldn’t understand my reaction. After all, I was a professional. As a former pastor and volunteer hospital chaplain I had been around many cancer patients. I’d seen people at their lowest and most vulnerable. As a writing instructor, I helped one woman write her cancer-survival book. Shirley and I had been caregivers for Shirley’s older sister for months before she died of colon cancer.

All of that happened before cancer became personal to me–before my wife learned she needed a mastectomy. To make it worse, Shirley was in the high-risk category because most of her blood relatives had died of some form of cancer. Years earlier, she had jokingly said, “In our family we grow things.”

In the days after the diagnosis and before her surgery, I went to a local bookstore and to the public library. I found dozens of accounts, usually by women, about their battle and survival. I pushed aside the novels that ended in a person’s death. A few books contained medical or technical information. I searched on-line and garnered useful information–but I found nothing that spoke to me on how to cope with the possible loss of the person I loved most in this world.

Our story ends happily: Shirley has started her tenth year as a cancer survivor. Not only am I grateful, but I remember my pain and confusion during those days. That concerns me enough to reach out to others who also feel helpless as they watch a loved one face the serious diagnosis of cancer.

 

That’s why I wrote When Someone You Love Has Cancer. I want to encourage relatives and friends and also to offer practical suggestions as they stay at the side of those they love.

The appendix offers specific things for them to do and not to do–and much of that information came about because of the way people reacted around us.

It’s a terrible situation for anyone to have cancer; it’s a heavy burden for us who deeply love those with cancer.

by Cecil Murphey

 

About the Book:

The World Health Organization reported that by the year 2010 cancer will be the number one killer worldwide. More than 12.4 million people in the world suffer from cancer. 7.6 million people are expected to die from some form of cancer. That’s a lot of people, but the number of loved ones of cancer sufferers is far greater. What do they do when a special person in their life is diagnosed with this devastating disease?

Murphey brings his experiences as a loved one and many years of wisdom gained from being a pastor and hospital chaplain to his newest book When Someone You Love Has Cancer: Comfort and Encouragement for Caregivers and Loved Ones (Harvest House Publishers). His honest I’ve-been-there admissions and practical helps are combined with artist Michal Sparks’ soothing watercolor paintings.

 

An interview with the author

cedil murphy

1. The first sentence of your book reads, “I felt helpless.” Tell us about that feeling.

Because her doctor put Shirley into the high-risk category, I felt helpless. To me, helpless means hating the situation, wanting to make it better, but admitting there was nothing I could do for her.

2. On that same page you also write, “One thing we learned: God was with us and strengthened us through the many weeks of uncertainty and pain.” How did you get from feeling helpless to that assurance?

Shirley and I sat down one day and I put my arm around her. “The only way I know how I can handle this,” I said, “is to talk about it.” Shirley knows that’s my way of working through puzzling issues. “Let’s consider every possibility.” If her surgeon decided she did not have breast cancer, how would we react? We talked of our reaction if he said, “There is a tumor and it’s obviously benign. Finally, I was able to say, with tears in my eyes, “How do we react if he says the cancer is advanced and you have only a short time to live?” By the time we talked answered that question, I was crying. Shirley had tears in her eyes, but remained quite calm. “I’m ready to go whenever God wants to take me,” she said. She is too honest not to have meant those words. As I searched her face, I saw calmness and peace. I held her tightly and we prayed together. After that I felt calm. Since then, one of the first things I do when I awaken is to thank God that Shirley and I have at least one more day together.

3. When most people hear the word cancer applied to someone they love, they have strong emotional reactions. What are some of them? What was your reaction when your wife was diagnosed with breast cancer?

As a pastor, a volunteer chaplain, and a friend I’ve encountered virtually every emotional reaction. Some refuse to accept what they hear. Some go inward and are unable to talk. Others start making telephone calls to talk to friends.

Me? I went numb, absolutely numb. That was my old way of dealing with overwhelming emotions. I heard everything but I couldn’t feel anything. It took me almost two weeks before I was able to feel–and to face the possibility that the person I loved most in the world might die.

4. “What can I do for my loved one with cancer?” That’s a good question for us to ask ourselves. How can we be supportive and helpful?

Many think they need to do big things; they don’t. Express your concern and your love.

Be available to talk when the other person needs it–and be even more willing to be silent if your loved one doesn’t want to talk. Don’t ask what you can do; do what you see needs doing. To express loving support in your own way (and we all express love differently) is the best gift you can offer.

5. Why do you urge people not to say, “I know exactly how you feel”?

No one knows how you feel. They may remember how they felt at a certain time. Even if they did know, what help is that to the person with cancer? It’s like saying, “Stop feeling sorry for yourself. I know what it’s like and I’m fine now.”

Instead, focus on how the loved one feels. Let him or her tell you.

6. Those with cancer suffer physically and spiritually. You mention God’s silence as a form of spiritual suffering. They pray and don’t seem to sense God. What can you do to help them?

God is sometimes silent but that doesn’t mean God is absent. In my upcoming book, When God Turns off the Lights, I tell what it was like for me when God stopped communicating for about 18 months.

I didn’t like it and I was angry. I didn’t doubt God’s existence, but I didn’t understand the silence. I read Psalms and Lamentations in various translations. I prayed and I did everything I could, but nothing changed.

After a couple of months, I realized that I needed to accept the situation and wait for God to turn on the lights again. Each day I quoted Psalm 13:1: “O Lord, how long will you forget me? Forever? How long will you look the other way?” (NLT)

I learned many invaluable lessons about myself–and I could have learned them only in the darkness. When God turns off the lights (and the sounds) I finally realized that instead of God being angry, it was God’s loving way to draw me closer.

7. Guilt troubles many friends and loved ones of caregivers because they feel they failed or didn’t do enough. What can you say to help them?

We probably fail our loved ones in some ways. No one is perfect. If you feel that kind of guilt, I suggest 3 things:

(1) Tell the loved one and ask forgiveness.

(2) Talk to God and ask God to forgive you and give you strength not to repeat your failures.

(3) Forgive yourself. And one way to do that is to say, “At the time, I thought I did the right thing. I was wrong and I forgive myself.”

8. Do you have some final words of wisdom for those giving care to a loved one with cancer?

Be available. You can’t take away the cancer but you can alleviate the sense of aloneness. Don’t ever try to explain the reason the person has cancer. We don’t know the reason and even if we did, would it really help the other person?

Be careful about what you say. Too often visitors and friends speak from their own discomfort and forget about the pain of the one with cancer. Don’t tell them about your cancer or other disease; don’t tell them horror stories about others. Above all, don’t give them false words of comfort. Be natural. Be yourself. Behave as loving as you can.

When Someone You

Love Has Cancer

Author: Cecil Murphey

Harvest House Publishers

ISBN: 978-0-7369-2428-3

Retail: $10.99

July 26, 2009

Who’s in Charge?

Filed under: humor — unwriter1 @ 6:18 pm

“What is all that racket John?”

“I have no idea dad. Let’s check it out.”

John opened the kitchen door, only to see a potato whiz by his dad’s ear. It splattered against the dining room table (it was a leftover baked potato).

“I told you he was half baked.”

“Ha! Did you see how he splattered out there?”

Wow! Those raw celery sticks get nasty don’t they? Ok, back to our story.

“John, I think you better go close that refrigerator door.”

“Yeah. I got a big steak in this.”

“Potato tossing celery and a sassy freezer? I’m not going out there!”

“Good point. I know how hot those radishes can get and if that jar of horseradish gets opened…”

“Hey celery, give it here, I can see better than you.”

“You trying to peanut butter me up carrot?”

“Hmm, that is an idea, but no. I can throw big bowls of battered butter better.”

The fight was on. This was the ultimate food fight. Thankfully the canned goods decided to sit this one out.

“Been there” Said Lima

“Holy cow dad! Now we’re getting plastered.”

“Sorry son, the yolks on you. Those were the eggs mom boiled yester…

DUCK!”

“That wasn’t duck, that was a chicken wing. Sorta answers the question of which came first, the chicken or the egg.”

“STOP IT! RIGHT NOW!”

“Go get ‘em Mom.”

The fight was over. There was a mess and the guys earned the privilege of cleaning up.

Yup – Mom rules the roost.

July 19, 2009

We lost it!

Filed under: rants,Uncategorized — unwriter1 @ 7:18 am
Tags: , , , ,

(warning, this is a long post with the links)

Where did it go? We have lost the country I grew up in. Common sense is dead and Marv Wilson has the eulogy for it on his blog. There is no disipline allowed for our children, thus they rule us. I’ve heard there is a supreme being that is supposed to be watching over us, but I don’t dare mention that in public. We used to, and we used to do so in school. Ask Red Skelton, The Pledge Of Allegiance .

So we are left with the question, where did the country of our youth go? We have crooked politicians, crime everywhere and we are being taxed to the limit. Our country is not what it used to be. But, on the other side of the coin, look at Europe and Asia. They don’t see the bad parts but they do see us. Let’s hope they stay that way as Kenny Rodgers says, God Bless America Again – Charlie Daniels Band .

 

God bless us all!

July 12, 2009

Have you ever been screwed?

Filed under: reviews — unwriter1 @ 8:43 pm

screwedMyron Bernstein  http://askmyron.net/

HAVE YOU BEEN ROYALLY SCREWED?

By Myron Bernstein

Haven’t we all been taken advantage of or been sold a bill of goods with respect to a product, good, or service that wasn’t what it seemed? We all have. Over the past 35 years, an ordinary man, with a little persistence and time spent, has been able to obtain from many companies what was originally promised. It is full of real life anecdotes that we have all experienced at one point in our lives with specific direction on how to get what you paid for in the first place. This is a book that will show you how to protect your rights and properly use the legal system, consumer protection agencies, and insurance commissions. You will see, for example, how to handle company’s so-called customer service departments. So, if you are looking for a read that will make you laugh and say, “Hey, I’ve had that happen to me,” then this is the book for you.

_________________________________________________________________

Myron has, over the past 35 years, found himself frustrated with people and companies selling him a bill of goods about their services and warranties.

Being just like any consumer he often didn’t know where to turn or how to fight large companies to get what was due him. It took a lot of learning to understand how to use the consumer protection agencies, insurance commissions and courts, when necessary, to get people and companies to perform.

At first it was slow going because no matter how he tried it seemed like he was hitting a brick wall, but with a little perseverance and asking many appropriate questions it started to get easier every time he tackled another problem. All of his thoughts and collective ideas have made Myron successful in getting a favorable resolution better than 95% of the time over the years.

Read a review:

http://bookreviewsbydebra.com/index.php/reviews.html?review=1836-Have-Your-Been-Royally-Screwed

July 7, 2009

MA Indeed

Filed under: humor — unwriter1 @ 8:55 am

I must admit, I’m a confirmed Marvaholic. I wasn’t until Amanda ran into Owen Fiddler. Then up comes Adam Atom and I’m a scientific observer. This little atom, must be hydrogen since he’s always flitting around and doésn’t seem to have much luck making stable connections. Besides, any atom worth it’s neutrons, would be zapped every time it checked out the latest in quasars. Although, I suspect that Adam may indeed be a photon since he does see the light in many situations.

Owen, on the other hand, doesn’t see much of anything except a world that is against him. He really should read Ï Romanced the Stone”. Ok, I see Adam at work here, messing up my quotes. Marv, you have got to get that little quark under control.

I attended the Marvaholics anonymous meeting and Ol’ Marv tried a disguise that just did not work. No stripper worth his shorts would ever put on a fake beard like that. Had it been a color that matched the hair on the head, maybe, but a blonde beard on salt and pepper hair? I don’t think so. Marv, you”ve been hanging around Owen just a wee bit too long.

http://theoldsilly.com/

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