The
people at a church we've been visiting for the past month or so have
been so warm and welcoming—it's been such a blessing.
Pene
has virtually no social activity outside of family, church, and
school (where she's a member of the cross-country team and
orchestra), so I asked her during summer vacation if she wanted to
invite friends over for dinner and a sleep-over and she said, Yes.
She has good, close friends at school that she hangs out with but
neither of the two she invited seemed interested or came over.
Bummer!
So
when a female doctor at the church we're attending asked if Braden
and Pene could join the youth group (including her daughter) ice
skating, sharing dinner at a restaurant, and sleeping over at her
house, we were thrilled and honored as we aren't really part of the
church yet, especially since everything would be gratis—the church
would cover the costs. Braden couldn't go due to a prior JROTC
commitment, but it was perfect because Pene loves skating, is still
getting to know the youth (four girls for this event), and needs
these types of stretching experiences outside her comfort zone as
most everything social she's done in recent years has been with
long-time friends or at least with Braden at her side, which is a
switch from her early years as a toddler/kid when she made friends readily, even at parks just playing on the
same playground set (and I'd like to see more of that outgoing
friendliness in her again).
We
were a bit concerned that she might not feel comfortable with the
sleep over at a strange house with almost-strangers, but by the time
the group finished dinner and skating and we called to see if she
wished to stay or come home, she asked Deanne, “Can I spend the
night?”—this during the drive over to the house. The doctor
reported to us at church the next morning that the girls had gotten
along fine and her daughter said, “Pene's not at all quiet,”
meaning once she felt comfortable, her shyness melted
and she talked plenty.
Compare
all these wonderful, real, and personal blessings to the presidential
politics saturating the news. In
all probability, Donald or Hillary will be the next president. Are
these really the best two candidates our vast, diverse country has to
offer? No doubt they're well known celebrities, but does that make
them the best qualified? And resumes' aside, what about the
all-important intangibles? I think Americans want and deserve a
forthright and trustworthy president. Perhaps I'm being idealistic,
but I could name a dozen people (as I bet you could) who'd better fit
the bill because of truly honest, decent, and irreproachable
characters, with unimpeachable integrities, who would always put the
good of the populace first and set aside personal feelings or gain,
politics, big money donors, and powerful lobbyists.
Alas, our country's
ruling class continues to devalue the populace, it seems to me. What
has it done to end gun violence, end ceaseless wars, fix Social
Security and Medicaid, rebalance income inequality and the budget,
enact meaningful campaign finance reform, eliminate poverty and
homelessness (come on, we're the wealthiest country in the world's
history), ensure affordable health care and housing for all, and
restrengthen and expand the middle class? Not much it seems, not in
decades. What has it been doing all these years? That's why I have
zero hope for this world.
But
I do have complete hope and trust in God and his kingdom, for he has
always come through for me without fail. The next president may
enact changes that have slight, occasional effects on my life, good
or bad, while God always has touched my life in huge, over-sized
positive ways, day by day, hour by hour, and minute by minute, saving
my life (I have serious health conditions), granting me peace through
trials, teaching me patience and perseverance, and bestowing countless
blessings on me. For that and all things of His world, I am
eternally grateful and hopeful.
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