This is an excerpt from the magazine God's Message...
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Not that the righteous are spared of problems. As they are still in this world, in more ways than one, they shall have their share of life's woes. Nonetheless, "The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears, And delivers them out of all their troubles. The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, And saves such as have a contrite spirit" (Psalms 34:17-18).
God's servant may find himself once in a while discouraged or with a broken heart, but He will not abandon him, as promised. Rather, God saves His servant who comes to Him with a contrite spirit. During distressing times, therefore, God expects His faithful servants to approach Him in prayer. And they can always count on Him.
Taken from "Even Through Distressing Times." Pasugo/God's Message. July 2008.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
When the Head Gets Too Big for the Hat
Sometimes it is nice to hang around know-it-alls, bigots and braggarts. You can hear it loud and clear when they fall flat on their faces!
And, yeah, they do fall hard! Hah!!!
However there are some downside when sticking around these guys. These people are so full of themselves that there is hardly any space left for others. It gets too crowded, too stifling! They eat up too much space that their icky personalities rub on like slime.
Eewww! Yuck!
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Rolling Down the River

" Think of problems like a swim in a river. When the current gets too rough for you to handle, climb up the bank for a while, and once you caught your breath and rested your limbs, dive back in with renewed strength and vigor to tackle the current. "
I have posted this elsewhere, and someone, a girl and obviously a young one, said it's easier said than done.
Yes, perhaps. But I guess the girl must have read the thought wrongly. Climbing up the river bank in the middle of tackling a problem is not the solution. Climbing up the river bank is a way to take a breather, to take a moment to stop and check out the situation, weigh options available, and think out solutions. One cannot think clearly if neck-deep in a problematic situation.
But with a rested mind, it gets easier to see solutions, and at times it's amusing to find that solutions are just there, sometimes shamefully obvious... waiting to be picked up, possibly imperceivable before because we are left myopic by problem-ridden river water.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Mommy Mushy Musings

The other night as I prepared dinner for my son and myself, I went in to his room to check on his preparations for the next day’s final exams. I found him sound asleep instead, sprawled across the bed with his books and notebooks strewn around him, obviously exhausted from all the reading and reviewing he had to do.
Looking at his peaceful face, my thoughts raced back to 14 years ago, when I first looked closely at my baby Pernell’s face, all cute and puffy, swaddled in baby linen and blissfully asleep. As I watched him from my hospital bed, deep maternal emotions tugged at my heart, drawing tears to my eyes.
I cried silently as my heart murmured a prayer, thanking the Lord for the little miracle I was gifted with.
As I watched him sleeping now, a teenager teetering towards becoming a young man, I feel the same emotions swelling in my heart. Unshed tears stung my eyes, my throat tightening from suppressed sobs. Here is my boy, fatherless at a tender age, yet already he shows resilience in facing life’s challenges.
I tidied up his things so he could have the bed all to himself. Closing the door as I exited the room, I cried silently as my heart murmured a prayer, thanking the Lord for the young miracle I was gifted with.
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