Meet Tammy

Tammy Litke is a homeschooler to one girl aged 15. Blogging since 2008 she loves to watch movies, play video games, spend time in the kitchen, and go on Disney Cruises.  Between recipes and reviews you'll find many helpful and some just plain funny posts on her blog. Welcome, pull up a chair and stay for a while!

This blog accepts forms of cash advertising, sponsorship, paid insertions or other forms of compensation. This blog uses affiliate links within posts.

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Entries in TV (15)

Thursday
Mar182010

Handy Manny Big Race

Handy Manny is a hot show among the pre-school crowd.  Probably because Handy Manny is just the kind of guy you'd like to be pals with.  He's friendly, his neighborhood is great, and he can fix anything (hence his name).  Do your little ones like to pretend they are repairing things right along with Manny when they watch?

Guess what?  Handy Manny has an all new show coming up: "Handy Manny Big Race" this Saturday, March 20th, at 7PM/6C on The Disney Channel.

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Feb132010

Disney's StarStruck Soundtrack

Disney's StarStruck is going to be big.  Sterling Knight is Christopher Wilde in this new Disney Channel Original Movie.  If the music is any indication, Disney has yet another hit.

Amber and I have been boppin' around and have played the tracks over and over again.

The StarStruck soundtrack was released on Tuesday, February 9th and is now available to purchase or download.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jan262010

Live For The Moment

Are you excited about life and its potential?  Or will you wait until your life turns 180 degrees to follow your dreams?

In a turn around from Survivor, Jeff Probst and Mark Burnett take viewers on an inspiring adventure through the eyes of somebody who has learned how to live life to its fullest in Live For The Moment

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Nov242009

What are Your 5 Favorite Holiday Activities to do with Your Kids?

I'm part of  Twitter Moms and they sent out an e-mail asking us to share our top 5 favorite holiday activities that we do with our kids, as part of the Dora Christmas Carol Contest.   I thought this would be a fun thing to share so here are our favorite things to do with Amber at Christmas time.

1. Making gingerbread houses.  This is something fun we do every year, but had a really fun time doing it on our Disney Cruise last December.  Check out our "mini house" compared to the "huge" one they had built as a decoration for the ship.  And yes that is real gingerbread!

2. Decorating the Christmas tree, while listening to Veggie Tales Christmas music.  Even though Amber is now 13, this is still a tradition.  She and Hubby put the tree up and love singing along with Bob and Larry.



3.  Watching the Nativity Story.  Since we believe the entire reason we celebrate Christmas is because God sent Jesus to Earth as a baby to grow up to be the perfect man to die on the cross to save us from our sins, we like to have the "visual" to go along with the awesome account in the New Testament as well.  This is a great movie if you haven't seen it.



 4. Eating Lofthouse cookies.  These are so yummy, and really I can't help but eat almost a whole package by myself.  Since that's the case I only get them at Christmas so that they are a real treat!  


5.  Playing Games.  While we tend to play more video games than board games as a family.  The holiday season tends to bring us back to our roots, and we like to gather around the table and play board and card games more at this time of the year.  There is something about gathering around the table with a Monopoly board (ah yea, of course our family plays the Star Wars version!) or Uno Cards, some hot chocolate and popcorn that makes memories!


What are your favorite family holiday activities?

Watch Dora's Christmas Carol Adventure Dec. 6 on Nickelodeon
Favorite Holiday Activities with Kids

Friday
Nov132009

Draw Star Wars The Clone Wars Book Giveaway

Grab your lightsaber (okay, just your pencil) and get ready to draw!

 

In a book not so far away, you will master the art of drawing all of your favorite Star Wars The Clone Wars characters.

Klutz's Draw Star Wars The Clone Wars is what you definitely want to get if you've ever wanted to draw your favorite characters from the show.
The book is amazing in the way that it allows you to draw the characters and practice to get them just right.

There are pages where you can try tracing, like this

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Oct292009

Star Trek: Voyager: Unworthy Review & Giveaway

Star Trek: Voyager: Unworthy

by: Kirstin Beyer
Synopsis
Freed with a thought, the greatest menace tohumanity, the Borg, are gone, absorbed into the Caeliar gestalt. Butare they? Can this deadly menace that has hovered over humanity fordecades truly be gone? Might some shadow of the Caeliar remain? TheFederation decides that they have to know, and Starfleet is ordered tofind out.

The Starship Voyager leads a fleet into a regionof space that has lived in fear of instant annihilation forgenerations: the Delta quadrant, home of the Borg. Afsarah Eden — thenew captain of Voyager — is charged with getting answers, to reach out to possible allies and resolve old enmities in the Delta quadrant.

Theperfection that was given to the Borg was withheld from Seven of Nine.Left behind, she is living a twilight existence — neither Borg norhuman — and slowly going mad. The whispers of the Collective,comforting murmurs she has always known, are replaced with a voice deepwithin her that keeps insisting she is Annika Hansen. Chakotay, theformer captain of Voyager, offers to help Seven rendezvous withthe ships that Starfleet Command has sent into the Delta quadrant, theprobable destination of the mysterious Caeliar.

These are not the friendly stars of the Federation; the unknown and the unexpected are the everyday.


While I haven't yet finished the book (I scheduled this post to run a few days before this blog book tour) Unworthy, from  what I have read so far is excellent.

Kristin Beyer writes at a quick pace that leads you through the story line without you getting lost (this is the second book Kristin Beyer has written in the Voyager line, Full Circle being the first).
If you like Science Fiction but did not watch the Star Trek Voyager show, then some of the characters might confuse you, and you may not really know the background of them.  A quick Google search on the characters and you should be good to go, don't let the lack of prior knowledge keep you from reading this. I did watch the show and had no problems feeling immersed from the start, but a quick refresher on the background is nice too!

Other than one perhaps needing a bit of history on the characters, the story is great and I am anxious to finish it, and then go back and read Full Circle.

1 winner from my site will receive: a copy of Star Trek: Voyager: Unworthy.

To enter leave a comment telling me your favorite Voyager character.  If you are unfamiliar with the characters, let me know what your favorite Sci-Fi book is.

For extra entries (the above must be done first) you can:
 
1. Become a fan of Three Different Directions on Facebook

2. Follow me on twitter andtweet this giveaway (this can be once per day, please leave the directlink to your tweet in the comments).
3. Follow my blog publicly.
4. Subscribe to my feed via e-mail or reader.
5. Blog about this giveaway linking back to my blog.
6. Add my button to your blog.

Thisgiveaway will end on November 12, 2009 at 11:59 pm cst and open to U.S.& Canadian Residents ages 18+. The winner will be chosen by random.org and will bee-mailed. The winner will have 48 hours to respond to the e-mail or analternate winner will be chosen. By entering this giveaway you arestating that you have read my **About Reviews and Privacy/Rules declaration and agree to them.


I received a complimentary copy of Star Trek: Voyager: Unworthy from Simon & Schuster to formulate my own opinion and review.

Tuesday
Sep222009

Medium on CBS

The new season of Medium begins on CBS this Friday the 25th (9/8c). It's not a show that we have watched in the past, but seeing as it is in its 6th season it must be pretty popular! Here is a trailer for it. 

Thursday
Sep102009

The Zula Patrol DVD Review & Giveaway

"The Zula Patrol" is an animated astronomy and science show for kids that airs as part of NBC's Saturday morning lineup, and on public t.v. stations during the week.

The colorful and diverse aliens that make up the Zula Patrol, fly across the galaxy, discovering all kinds of interesting things.



I received both the “The Zula Patrol: Animal Adventures in Space” (released in June ’09) and “The Zula Patrol: Moons Mayhem” (released on Aug. 25) to review.

Here is a synopsis of each DVD.

In The Zula Patrol: Animal Adventures in Space!, the team explores how insects, reptiles, mammals, plants and rocks form and interact with each other. In Larvae or Leave Me (the first episode), Skip the grasshopper can’t find his friend Wriggly the caterpillar – until he discovers, with help from The Zula Patrol, that Wriggly has transformed into a beautiful butterfly! Four additional stories on the DVD are: Egg Hunt, There Goes the Neighborhood, Choosing Sides and Camp Worm. No job is too big for The Zula Patrol, as they search for stolen frog eggs, help restore life to a canyon ecosystem, solve the mystery of the missing honey, and tunnel through dirt with their worm comrades to help the trees grow – and end up thwarting a threatened “alien invasion” from another planet.




The Zula Patrol: Moons Mayhem follows the intrepid team from Zula in six humor-filled stories that begin with a challenge, and end with a resolution, as they explore the fascinating, often volatile world of moons. The episodes include: Moon Struck, Blue Moon, Going Through a Phase, Moons Mayhem, Three Ring Gorga and Me, Myself and Io. It’s non-stop lunar adventure for The Zula Patrol, as they as they rescue a turbulent Venus, who is on a quest to acquire a moon of her own; discover the many moons of Jupiter during Jupiterfest; explore the composition of the surface of Earth’s moon; help save Bula from an awful Were-Mouse curse, and thwart Dark Truder’s nefarious plan to steal all the moons within the solar system.

My thoughts:

I had never heard of this t.v. series or the DVDs prior to my reviewing them. I'm always on the lookout for products for my sister's children and to share with my friends who have younger children. So I was eager to check these out.

There is a lot of good science fact in these shows. I especially liked the episode about Jupiter's moon, Io. I learned a lot from it and would even consider having my middle schooler watch it if we had a homeschool lesson geared around planets or astronomy.

HOWEVER, if you, like our family, believe in a universe created by God, and a young universe (not billions of years old), then I suggest you watch the episodes before allowing you children to view them. Not all the episodes are written from a non-creation perspective, which is why I suggest previewing them. The episodes that don't mention the way things came to be or time frames, are very good from an education stand point. We found the episodes we had no issue of theory with, were as entertaining as they were educational.

For those of you who homeschool or are teachers there is even some curriculum to use at TheZulaPatrol.com. (On the upper left hand corner of the page called Zula School Curriculum.)

To complement these DVDs, ZulaWorld.com has games and activities for your child to particpate in. Kids can create an alien of their own and give them a name, which is their icon throughout their time online. The base activities are free, but to access higher level activities there is a charge.

The Zula Patrol DVDs are appropriate for ages 4 and up, while ZulaWorld.com is geared for a little older kids.

To enter for a chance to win a set of two Zula Patrol DVDs OR one of ten free ZulaWorld.com VIP Memberships for one month, leave a comment here letting me know who your children's favorite Zula Patrol character is or if they have never seen them before which DVD you think they'd like best. (The first chosen comment by Random.org will win the dvds, the next ten will win the ZulaWorld.com VIP Memberships).

Get extra chances to win by: (the above entry must be completed first before any additional entries will be accepted) Leave an additional comment for each that you are eligible for.

  1. linking to this giveaway on your blog
  2. subscribing to Three Different Directions feed by e-mail or reader
  3. following Three Different Directions publicly
  4. following me on twitter and tweeting this contest. (this can be done daily)
This giveaway will end on September 23, 2009 at 11:59 pm cst and is open to U.S. Residents ages 18+. The winner will be chosen by random.org and will be e-mailed. The winner will have 48 hours to respond to the e-mail or an alternate winner will be chosen. By entering this giveaway you are stating that you have read my **About Reviews statement at the bottom of this page and my Privacy/Rules declaration and agree to them.

Saturday
Aug152009

The Good Wife - Accidentally On Purpose

Okay seriously, I don't watch a lot of television. Well I probably do, but I don't think I do. It seems though every time I find a show I really, really like, it gets canceled after a season or two, some of them don't even make it through the first...sigh...

Consistently though some of our favorite shows that we watch tend to be on CBS. Coincidence? I don't think so, they just put out good programming. My favorite is The Amazing Race, I live vicariously through the contestants, oh how I'd love to be on that show but you need to be a U.S. citizen (silly rule!). We also are big fans of NCIS. I'm looking forward to seeing the spin-off of that one.

In any case we're always looking for a 1/2 dozen new shows to replace one or two that finished or were canceled. What? you say. 6 shows to replace 2. Where's the math? Oh yeah, remember my earlier statement of all the shows I like get canceled..lol! It takes 6 shows on my schedule to usually end up with 2 keepers!

One of them I know is going to be The Good Wife. This is a new show that is debuting this fall season for CBS. I got to see the premier episode, and I am so looking forward to watching it.


Julianna Marguiles stars in this show as Alicia Florrick, who re-enters the workforce as a junior associate at a law firm after 13 years of being the "good wife" to her husband Peter who has fallen from grace in the political realm. His arrest, imprisonment and resulting financial burden require Alicia to become the family's breadwinner and prove herself in an arena of co-workers fresh out of college. Add to that her recognizable name and the odds against her are mounting quickly.

I'm not usually one for legal dramas on t.v. but this one held my attention the whole episode. The general storyline surrounding the Florrick family is interesting and plausible, and ultimately will run in the background at least for the first season. Each individual episode will have its own cases and characters to run through, which should keep it from getting stale. The premiere episode will be on September 22, at 10 pm est/pst.

Do you want a peek....

Another new show on the CBS Lineup this fall is Accidentally on Purpose starring Jenna Elfman.

I'm a big fan of Jenna Elfman's. I think she is a terrific actress and is so versatile in the roles she can play.

Accidentally on Purpose is a comedy about a single woman who finds herself pregnant after a one night stand with a much younger guy. Wanting a role in his child's life Zack (the young man) isn't about to just turn around and leave, but Billie (Elfman)is not keen on her baby's father living out of a van...so she invites him to live with her platonically. She has no idea what she's getting into....

We don't watch any 1/2 hour comedies around here, I've just never really found any that I care for. Likely I won't be watching this one either as much as I enjoy Jenna Elfman, the show just didn't engage me. But you can decide after watching a clip here, if you want to tune in to the premiere on September 21, 8:30 pm est/pst.

Wednesday
May272009

Wordless/Wordful Wednesday

Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Amber. Its 13-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no stuffed toy has gone before.


The Future Begins

I have simply made the logical deduction that she is her father's daughter

I'm a stuffed toy, NOT an engineer.

In plain non-Vulcan English, we have an imaginative kid.

Tuesday
May052009

FIRST Wild Card Tour: Murder by Family Review

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Murder by Family: The Incredible True Story of a Son's Treachery and a Father's Forgiveness

Howard Books (May 12, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Kent Whitaker was happily married to Tricia for 27 years, until she and their younger son Kevin were murdered in December, 2003. At that point, Kent retired from the construction business and put his energies into restoring his life and working with his remaining son Bart, who was charged and later given the death penalty for arranging the shootings.

This story has been featured on CBS’s crime program 48 Hours Mystery and on the Oprah Winfrey Show. Taping for ABC’s Primetime and Good Morning America has been completed, with airings scheduled for Spring of 2009. In September, 2008, Howard Books (Simon & Schuster) released his book Murder by Family, which tells this amazing (and ultimately uplifting) story of forgiveness, healing and how God works within tragedy to bring about great good. Murder by Family was recently named to the New York Times Best Seller List.

Through a busy schedule of speaking nationally, Kent shares his story of forgiveness and new beginnings to churches, business groups, conferences, and prisons. He also volunteers for nonprofit organizations in the Sugar Land, Texas, area and for River Pointe Community Church.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Howard Books (May 12, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1439164606
ISBN-13: 978-1439164600

Also available in hardcover:

List Price: $22.99
Hardcover: 224 pages
Publisher: Howard Books (September 23, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1416578137
ISBN-13: 978-1416578130

My Review:

Picture the scene: a family comes home from a graduation dinner for their son, they open the front door and only minutes later two are dead and two injured. Kent Whitaker doesn't have to imagine that scene, it was his family it happened to. Having already forgiven the murderer at the outset before the authorities even knew who was responsible, Kent unknowingly has forgiven his own son.

Kent Whitaker shares his devastating experience openly in this book. His novel of showing the immense love of Christ to his son in unbelievable circumstances is an interesting true crime book.

If you are interested in learning more about Kent, his story of forgiveness and love, his experiences were featured on ABC's 20/20 on Friday May 1st.

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

The First 200 Minutes

I had always heard that your life flashed before your eyes. But that’s not what happened as I lay on the cold concrete that December night, watching the blood from a gunshot wound cover my white shirt. Instead, I found myself praying for my family. There had been four shots, one for each of us.

I told God that if it were my time, I was ready to die, but I prayed that he would spare my wife and two sons. I called to each of them but got no response except for a few quiet, wet coughs from my wife, Tricia. Although I couldn’t see her from where I had fallen, I knew that it was her because when I had first tried to get up, I saw her blond hair splayed out on the threshold of our home’s front door. Though I had never heard that kind of cough before, I instinctively knew it was the sound of a person trying to clear lungs filling with blood. The silence coming from the dark house was horrible. My God, I thought, he’s shot us all.

Life can change in a moment. Just seconds earlier we had been a happy family of four returning from a surprise dinner celebrating our older son Bart’s anticipated college graduation. He had called that afternoon, telling Tricia that he was through with exams and was coming home for the evening. We had enjoyed a great seafood dinner, including a dessert with “Congratulations!” written with chocolate syrup on the plate’s edge. I snapped a few pictures, and then we took the short drive home. How strange that those would be the last photos we would ever have together.

As we got out of the car, our younger son, Kevin, a sophomore in college, led the way to our front door. He stepped inside, with Tricia right behind him. I heard a huge noise, but I didn’t immediately recognize it as a gunshot. A moment of silence, and then Tricia exclaimed, “Oh, no!” as another shot was fired. I still didn’t understand what was happening. I stepped forward and for the first time saw inside the house. The light from the front porch illuminated a ski-masked figure about eight feet away, standing next to the stairs. I couldn’t see Kevin, though he was lying in the shadows next to where the man was standing, or Tricia, who must have been right by my feet. I just stood there wondering which one of Kevin’s goofball friends was playing a joke on us with the paintball gun.

Suddenly I was slammed in the shoulder with enough force to send me spinning back and to my left. Landing face up on the front porch, I still didn’t grasp what was happening. As I tried to get up, I felt a searing pain in my right arm and realized it was badly broken. A fourth shot rang out as comprehension flooded in. We had been shot. We had all been shot. It struck me that I might be dying.

Then my neighbor Cliff was kneeling over me, comforting me. “Don’t worry, buddy! Help is on the way!”

In the distance I heard sirens as Cliff pulled off his T-shirt and pressed it to my wound. I realized then that no one knew where the shooter was and that Cliff might be in danger. I panicked. “Get out of here! He may still be inside!”

Cliff told me to hold on and ran for home. Moments later a squad car pulled up in front of our house, and then another, and a third. I was aware of more sirens, including the deep foghorn of a fire truck, but they were still far away. With heightened senses I heard muffled footfalls as police ran into and around the house, guns drawn and flashlights flicking illumination into the shadows. After only a minute or two someone called out that the house was clear. By then the whole cul-de-sac that faced our home was full of emergency vehicles. It couldn’t have been more than five minutes since the shootings.

People were everywhere. Neighbors were streaming out of their homes while paramedics swarmed. Two men worked on me, cutting away my leather jacket and shirt, trying to stop the bleeding. I repeatedly asked for information on my family, and finally one of the paramedics quietly said, “Sir, please, let us do our job. You’re in good hands, and lots of good folks are with the rest of your family.”

Then, over all the confusion and noise, as they hurried inside the house, I heard one policeman ask another, “What do you want to do about the DOA?”

My heart froze. Dead On Arrival. I knew that at least one of my family members had died. But which one? And why? Were they all dead?

The sound of a helicopter cut through the night, and I saw the landing lights and then the cherry-red body of Life Flight. Three paramedics raced a gurney down the sidewalk, and one of the police officers told me that they were taking Tricia to the hospital. My heart leaped with joy, because that meant she was still alive. Thank God! But then I realized that this also meant that at least one, and by now perhaps both, of my boys were dead. I began to shake all over and knew I was going into shock. I chattered to the paramedics that I was freezing and that they had better get something to cover me. They replied that as soon as Tricia’s Life Flight took off, the second Life Flight would land for me.

What? Life Flight for me? Was I hurt worse than I realized? Did this mean that both boys were already dead, and there was no need for them to be flown to the medical center?

I really didn’t have time to think about it: with a storm of air and sound, the helicopter took off, and moments later a second one landed. I was put on a gurney, covered with warm sheets and a blanket, and stowed in the back. With the high-pitched scream of jet turbines, we took off and began our eight-minute flight to the Houston Medical Center, part of perhaps the finest network of hospitals in the country. If anyone could keep my family alive, the medical staff there could.

Minute 30—Flashback

As we flew, I caught occasional glimpses of freeways and buildings through the copilot’s floor windows. My mind jumped back six months to my only other helicopter ride. The boys and I were in Colorado, on an adventure to celebrate my fifty-fifth birthday. We spent one day mountain biking and another racing along challenging trails on four-wheel ATVs. But my favorite part of the trip was the two days of intense white-water rafting on the Arkansas River as it snaked through the Royal Gorge. While on the river, we saw a sleek red helicopter crest the gorge 1,100 feet above us, roll into a steep dive, and pull up just before hitting the river. It rocketed fifty feet over us, blasting us with downdraft. All six of us guys in the raft went wild.

The next day we took the ride.

It was like a roller coaster without tracks. Incredible! The boys and I enjoyed it so much that we did it again two days later before coming home; it was one of the most wonderful memories of my life. But as I looked out at the lights of the hospital landing pad, remembering that fantastic trip, I felt as though I were watching the home videos of some other person; there was just no connection. I was numb.

Minute 40—In the Trauma Unit

It only took a moment for the trauma team to whisk me inside, where I was surrounded by doctors and nurses - none of whom would tell me anything about my family. The next thing I knew, my mom and dad were there. Someone from the hospital administration arrived, and when I asked her about my wife and sons, she told me not to worry: my son Bart was being transferred by ambulance and would arrive shortly. He would be treated in this same room, just a few feet from me. That told me everything, as I read between the lines. They were only working on two of us.

I turned to my parents. “Mom, I think there’s a good chance that Tricia and Kevin are dead.” Turning to the woman from administration, I asked, “Isn’t that so?” She looked at me for a long moment, nodded her head, and said that it was.

Bart was wheeled into the room a few moments later. I learned that he had rushed into the dark house and, in an apparent scuffle with the shooter, had been shot in the left arm. He was in shock, reacting to the horror of everything. The trauma team scurried around, cleaning wounds and applying temporary casts, since both of us had broken arms. The bullet had entered my right shoulder and traveled through the arm muscle, striking midhumerus and shattering the bone. Bart’s upper left arm was broken where the bullet had hit. Amid the organized chaos, things began to sink in; God was allowing the truth to come a little at a time.

I felt God’s presence and comfort. On one hand I was beginning to absorb how radically things had changed, while on the other I had a calm assurance that I was not alone and that God would knit whatever happened into his plans for good. Scriptures of comfort came to mind. It was as if God gave me a shot of emotional Novocain. Even though I was becoming more aware of the extent of the tragedy, I trusted God.

Before I knew it, I was being wheeled out of the trauma center and into a corridor. As we passed through the big emergency room doors, I was met by forty or fifty friends. I rolled through a canyon of loved ones. Touched by the grief and worry in their eyes, I began to comfort them. I can’t explain it; the words just came out. My response was unexpected and somewhat out of character.

Later that night, after the nurses had gone, I was finally alone with my thoughts. I lay there trying to wrap my mind around it all—and wasn’t doing a very good job. Piece by piece the reality settled onto my soul.

Minute 180—Reality and Choices

My wife, my lover, my best friend, the one who knew and loved me better than any other, to whom I had been true for twenty-eight years, was dead. My son Kevin, with his incredible Christian faith, his crazy, fun-loving personality, and his passion for sports and the outdoors, would never graduate from college, marry, or give us grandchildren. Bart was down the hall suffering a grief and shock that seemed even more intense than what I was feeling. At fifty-five, I would be facing the last third of my life without most of my family.

For years I have told people that faith is not a feeling but a conscious act of the will. You have to choose to trust and believe, especially when circumstances and your feelings are screaming that you can’t trust God . The Bible says that God can take everything and work it for good for those who love him and are called to his service; well, Tricia and Kevin loved him, and so did I. We were all called to his service, but how could these murders possibly be worked for good? I could imagine no such scenario. And if that verse of the Bible was untrustworthy, what other verses might not apply when I needed them? I might as well throw it all away.

So, here I was, in the middle of a horrific situation in which I had to choose either to go with my feelings and slip into bitterness and despair or to follow my own advice and stand on God’s promises even when they don’t make sense. I wrestled with this for a long time, because I knew that I could go either way and that the consequences of the choice were serious.

Finally, I made the decision to stand on the promises of God. It was one of the most important decisions I've ever made.

When I resolved to trust God, I felt a peace come over me that had nothing to do with the morphine drip. The next thought popped unexpectedly into my mind: What about the shooter?

I realized that God was offering me the ability to forgive, if I wanted to take advantage of it. Did I really want to forgive this guy? I know the Bible says we are to forgive those who hurt us. I know God tells us that vengeance is his, if he chooses dispense it. I have even heard secular health professionals say that forgiveness is the most important thing people can do to heal themselves. But did I really want to forgive, even if God was offering a supernatural ability to do so?

In an instant the answer sprang full-grown into my mind. My heart told me that I wanted whoever was responsible to come to Christ and repent of this awful act. At that moment I felt myself completely forgiving him. This forgiveness astounded me, because earlier I had experienced feelings of incredible sadness and intense anger and the desire to kill the person responsible with my own hands. Little did I realize just how important my decision to forgive would be in the coming months.

I have had a hundred people tell me that they think I’m nuts—that I should hate the shooter and cry out for vengeance. Perhaps I am crazy, but I believe that in those early moments God worked supernaturally, allowing me to forgive completely and immediately, because he had plans for me, and those plans required that I have the forgiveness problem settled once and for all.

For the next two days, as Bart and I waited in our rooms for surgery, we had a nearly unprecedented number of visitors. People were always lined up in the halls waiting to see us; they came and went day and night. In fact, the crowding was so severe that the hospital converted a double room on our floor into a hospitality suite stocked with fruit baskets, cookies, coffee, soft drinks, sofas, and chairs. The hospital showed a lot of class, but I think crowd control was also an important factor.

The next day I had my first visit from Detective Marshal Slot and his partner Billy Baugh from the Sugar Land Police Department. They questioned me extensively about what had happened, and I cooperated, telling them I would do everything I could to help them find out who was responsible for this murderous attack.

The detectives returned a day later to tell me they had learned that Bart was not about to graduate from college after all. In fact, he was not even enrolled in school. I was shocked at the news and horrified at the realization that, if this were true, this knowledge coupled with some mistakes Bart had made years earlier might distract the police from searching for the real killer and lead them to look at Bart as a possible suspect. Marshal told me that they were looking at every possibility, which confirmed my fears.

After they left I fumbled my way into a wheelchair and rolled down to Bart’s room, where I found him asleep, as he seemed to be whenever I came to visit. It was as if he had crawled into a hole, trying to escape this nightmare. I asked his girlfriend (who had camped out at the hospital since the first morning) for a few minutes alone with my son.

“Bart, what were you thinking? You weren’t even in school? How could you lie to us about graduation?”

Bart seemed to forcibly pull himself out of some private hell as he sat up in his bed. The curtains were closed, and the room was dark. Gloom pervaded the atmosphere, with those areas just outside the edge of my vision in deepest shadow. At the time the thought did little more than register in my subconscious, but I would later recall this oppressive darkness and do much thinking about it. For now, my thoughts were focused on Bart. A momentary flicker of strange emotions danced in his eyes; he seemed to careen between grief, shame, regret, and fear.

“Dad, I’m so sorry! I didn’t want to tell you because I knew how much you and Mom were looking forward to my graduation. I just figured I could work it out and take the classes next semester, and nobody would know.”

“Nobody would know!” I was furious. “How would we not know? How would they let you graduate? How did you get into this mess in the first place?”

“Things were crazy at work all summer. Some guys quit, everybody was working long hours, and with school starting, I just didn’t have enough time. I’m so sorry! I decided to help at work and make up school in the spring.”

“Do you have any idea what you’ve done? Thanks to this ‘little’ lie about graduation, the police think you’re a suspect! In fact, right now you seem to be their only suspect. You weren’t in school, you told everyone you were graduating, and they think you arranged to have us killed to cover it up. Can you see how stupid that was? Your lie has done the impossible—it has made Tricia and Kevin’s deaths even worse because now the police think you were involved! Do you have any idea how bad this is?”

Years ago, on a bike ride, I saw a hawk fly right over me, so close I could almost touch it. Clutched within its talons was a field mouse, still alive. I saw the bird swoop up to its nest, bringing breakfast to her young; it would be impossible to forget the look of resignation and terror in the mouse’s eyes as he passed over me. For a moment I saw the same look in Bart’s eyes, but it was gone almost instantly, replaced with resolve.

“Dad, that’s nuts! I didn’t have anything to do with the shootings! I’m sorry about the lie, it just happened. I didn’t mean to lie to you and Mom—I was just afraid of what you would say, and I didn’t want to disappoint you. This will be okay.”

“I don’t know. I’m so mad now, I could spit! I’ve told you before: you cannot ever allow yourself to start lying again! Look at the consequences of this one! If you hadn’t told the lie about graduation, they would be looking elsewhere and might find the real killer before the trail gets cold. Now they’re wasting time on you, and who knows how long they’ll keep at it!”

After a while I calmed down, and I told him I loved him and that the police would soon realize nothing tied him to the shootings. I went back to my room, still angry, disappointed, and depressed. What would happen next?

As the days passed, two things happened: First, the investigation centered more and more on Bart as the mastermind of a plot to kill the rest of the family, assuming that his motives were greed and to cover up for failures at school. Second, I came to realize that perhaps my life had been spared for a reason. God must have something important for me to do, because I could see no logical explanation for my still being alive. The bullet hit me well away from my right lung, and nearly six inches from my heart. The gunman couldn’t have been that bad a shot. Not at that close range.

It occurred to me that perhaps my purpose was to be God’s agent of guidance and instruction for Bart. If he was innocent, I would be the anchor he relied on as he weathered the storms of suspicion; I wouldn’t let him go through that horror alone. If he was guilty, I would be in a unique position to model God’s unconditional forgiveness and love. I might be the person God would use to soften Bart’s heart. And since I already had forgiven whoever was responsible, if Bart was guilty, he would be covered in a pure forgiveness, granted before I ever thought it might apply to my son. Either way, until I knew more, I would be nonjudgmental and supportive. While I couldn’t gloss over anything or minimize the consequences of any wrongs Bart might have committed, I still needed to show him that God forgives and that there is always hope.

Maybe I’m crazy. But I took comfort in knowing that I was doing what God wanted me to do. I like reading that line in the Bible about the wisdom of God being foolishness to man. Maybe a nut was exactly whom God intended to use.

Sunday
Mar012009

Yanni Voices on PBS

If you've ever heard Yanni's music you will know that it's outstanding and ingenious.

Now in a PBS exclusive event airing in many markets Monday March 2nd (you can check here to see when it is playing where you live), you can hear for the first time Yanni Voices. This is where Yanni adds the dynamic and exceptional voice talents of Nathan Pacheco, Chloe, Ender Thomas and Leslie Mills to his harmonious playing.

Check out this preview:

Thank you One2One Network for making us aware of this great event!

Sunday
Nov022008

Popular Television Shows


If I would look through the ratings that are often published for popular t.v. shows, I'm pretty sure we watch some of them.
Heroes, NCIS and The Unit are a few that we dvr each week. I'm anxiously awaiting the return of Lost next year.

That being said, the ones that we watch that aren't as popular but we like very much, often get canceled. Maybe our tastes are too sophisticated for everyone else lol!

I read some disappointing news the other day online that one of the shows on my "watch every episode list" Pushing Daisies, is in the imminent stages of cancellation.

Which I find too bad, because it's one of the few shows that provide escapism with entertainment in a unique way that doesn't rely on a lot of violence or bedroom scenes.

So I will continue to watch until it is really pulled off the airwaves, but should it leave, perhaps Ned can touch it with his fingertip and bring it back to life, I mean if it can happen to Jericho, anything is possible right?

Friday
Aug292008

Conquering Clutter

Today's Heart of the Matter Friday Meme is "Conquering Clutter".

Before we homeschooled and I had more time during the day to watch some television one of my favorite tv shows was Clean Sweep. While the rooms in my home have never looked like the ones they feature, I have employed a couple of tips that they use to conquer the clutter in my home.

#1 -Tackle one room at a time - I think we often want to have everything done at once. That is our nature. Or we do nothing because the thought of going through all of our stuff is just overwhelming. I pick one room once a month to go through and declutter. That way I go through our home twice a year and use the "trash, giveaway, find a spot for it, keep" method.

#2 - In and out - I have an "in an out" rule in our home. For everything that comes in that is new, that is not replacing a broken, old,lost or outgrown item, one thing goes out. If Genius purchases a new video game, an old one must be given away or sent to the resale shop. If I purchase her some new clothes just because, the same applies with an item she hardly wears even though it still fits her. If I purchase a kitchen gadget I just have to have, another less used one, needs to be donated. This cuts down on the growing clutter, and makes us more careful about our purchases. If there is nothing that we are willing to part with at the moment, we are less likely to buy new things, and thus be better stewards of the paycheck God has blessed us with.

This third strategy is one my Dad enforced while I was growing up, and it worked!

#3 - Everything has a place and there is a place for everything - This rule applies more to Genius than anyone else in our home, as Hubby and myself are fairly responsible at putting things back where they belong. It was a tough love, and hard task to do, but Genius is somewhat of a neat freak now. By using the above rule she learned quickly that cleaning up her possessions or things that she had used from others that were not put away, was a responsibility better not left undone. In our home, she is given two warnings to put her things where they belong when she is finished using them. After she has been told twice, and the items in question are still lying around, they are put in a bag and given or thrown away. Not just for a little while, but permanently. She only had to lose a couple of favorite things once, and now is a prompt "cleaner upper" when asked, since she knows we will follow through with the decision.

I am looking forward to reading other ways that homeschoolers conquer the clutter in their home, come along and read with me at Heart of the Matter Online, or post on your blog, and link back there, so I can check out your methods too!

Tuesday
Apr152008

Alien Nation

Before I met Hubby, I pretty much was a sitcom girl. I loved watching all those old 80's shows like, The Cosby Show, or Growing Pains. Hubby introduced me to SciFi, a genre I was sure I was going to despise, which I surprisingly embraced, and is now my favorite. Of all the shows we have watched, Alien Nation is a memorable one. Sci Fi universe, has a contest running for a dvd collection of the television movies that aired during and after the series had its run. If you have had any interest in this show, or have never seen it, this is a great opportunity to add to your summer television watching,when not much else is on the air anyway!