I Wonder You know, Lord, how I serve You With great emotional fervor In the limelight. You know how eagerly I speak for You At a women's club, You know how I effervesce when I promote A fellowship...
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I Wonder You know, Lord, how I serve You With great emotional fervor In the limelight. You know how eagerly I speak for You At a women's club, You know how I effervesce when I promote A fellowship...
Supporting Your Spouse After a Layoff The unemployment rate nationally is 9.1% as of August 2011. "Honey, I've got some good news and some bad news. The good news is that I'd love to meet you for...
There are few words that strike terror in the heart like the word cancer. It is such a silent, insidious disease. A survivor usually wonders when and where it will strike next. At age 53, I was...
It's okay to cry. It's okay not to cry. Just like adults, each child is unique and copes with grief in her or his own unique way. Children may go through some of the same stages of grief as adults -...
The Process of Grief When my husband was killed in a private plane crash, I was completely devastated. Not only was I left a very young widow, but I also had two teen-aged boys to raise on my own. ...
When we adopt a child who looks different from us, we generally feel we can handle the stares and loss of privacy that go with the territory. We may find, however, that the frequent questions and comments of strangers and relatives sometimes annoy and worry us. At the heart of our anger and anxiety is the fear that our adopted child will be hurt by thoughtless questions, or that their older siblings, who look less exotic, will feel neglected, but this need not happen.