Saturday 30 January 2016

A Purple-Nosed Mystery

Avid readers often have a genre of story that they are most attracted to.  If you are like me, you have genres that you love at certain periods of your life.  My parents passed on a love of reading to me and my siblings and my mom spent a lot of time reading to us.  

The moment that I first began to read  ("Cat and Dog" - it was a nail-biter!), it was like a whole new world had been unlooked....the magical world of words!  My favourite author, as a young teen, was Lucy Maud Montgomery.  Her wordy, poetic writing style appealed to my dreamy outlook on life.  I own all her books and still have to fight myself when I see a copy of "Anne of Green Gables" at any used book store.

"You don't need it, Brigette.  You own 3 copies already."  I will argue to myself.

"Yeah, but this one is in LARGE print and has pictures.  Maybe I can buy it and give it to someone as a gift.  What a nice gift!" I will defend myself.

"Yeah," I will scoff to myself, "that's what you said about the last few copies you bought.  Remember what Paul said about buying too many books..."

"I know...I know," I will respond, "but who needs food when you can have beautiful beautiful literature to feed your soul.."

"Okay...maybe just one more copy..." I will eventually relent and another lovely copy of that amazing book will have made it's way into my home.

As I grew older, I made my way through murder mysteries, feminist writings and musings, post-modern stories and classic literatures.  I fell in love with the writing of Margaret Laurence - another female Canadian writer - and had the exciting opportunity to study her at two different high schools.  I still have some passionate responsive readings that I pull out sometimes and read, admiring the fire in my younger self.  

When I met Paul, it was important to me to know what literary genre he preferred.
"So, what do you like to read?" I recall quipping.

"I love fantasy." He answered.

"FANTASY!??" I remember scoffing, "Like stuff about dragons and magical fairies?"  This was when I was stacks of books deep into my classical readings so I thought that fantasy was a non-genre or, at least, a genre not worthy of my reading attention (what a literary snob I was!)

"You mean, you have never read any fantasy?" Paul was not fazed by my ostentatious manner, "you should really try it sometime..."  

He handed me a novel from his stacks of collected books.  There was some sort of giant sword on the front cover.  I remember swallowing a snort of disdain, grumbling something about the things you will do for love and then opening the front cover.  I was quickly absorbed by a quest pattern that was gripping, a character development that was complex and philosophies that were more elaborate and convoluted than anything I had ever encountered before.  Add to this the fact that the authors were working within a world that they had completely created, philosophies and religions they had imagined, geographies and histories that they had designed by words placed together with words.  I was awestruck and quickly found my favourite fantasy author, another Canadian:  Guy Gavriel Kay and read all his books.
Ahhh....books....so little time.  So many books.

When Paul and I were blessed with children, I rubbed my hands together and began assembling complete collections of children's literature.  Beatrix Potter, A.A. Milne, Dr. Seuss, Shakespeare for Kids..... I would read and read and read to the kids.  Last year, we discovered books on CD.  Whoa!  My mind was blown; no longer do we waste time just driving anywhere; we drive and listen to stories.  The added benefit of listening to stories (beyond having a car that is quiet) is hearing a story read in various accents.  We listened to "Black Beauty" and many of James Herriot's writings as they were narrated by a man with a thick British accent.   We giggled together as the tortoise in "Alice and Wonderland" sang his "beautiful beautiful beautiful soup" song.....my four-year-old often sings this and we all break out in chortles.  Currently, we are listening to a radio play of CS Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia narrated by his very own step-son.  My family will climb into our car, buckle our seat belts and be swept away into worlds of fantasy, mystery and beauty; the cheapest school trips available!  

But I digress and hardly remember why I am leading you all down this road.  Let's chalk it up to plot development and get back on track.  Genres.  That's where this all began.  

What do you like to read?  Sword-swinging fantasy?  Factual non-fiction?  Heart-hammering historicals?  Sentimental romances?  Philosophic theologies?  Laugh-out-loud comedies?  Or provocative mysteries?

I'd like to share a little mystery with you.
It did not begin with a dark and stormy night.  The day was bright, brisk and had a temperature that was below zero.  The sky was brilliant blue.  There never was a dark and mysterious detective with a name like Hieronymus Bosch that entered the scene rumpled, unshaven and complex.  Only a series of cheery nurses and cheerier surgeons.  But the mystery component remains.

What was so mysterious was ........my nose!  That's right!   Grip your seat, dear reader!
About a week before I was scheduled for surgery, my nose decided to turn a deep red.  I examined it, poked it, cajoled it but it refused to return to a normal shade of Brigette-skin-colour.  

I decided it was acne deciding to pay me a visit in an attempt to comfort me with memories of my teenaged years.  I poked a little harder and only achieved in making my red nose an angry-red nose WITH A SCAB!
It is difficult to hide an angry scabby nose when you have no hair or eyebrows, thereby nothing with which to do a comb-over.  Paul told me it would be awkward to do any sort of comb-over onto the middle of my face anyways but I scoffed at him and would not be comforted.  Where was my rumpled detective who could solve this mystery?
As the days to my surgery counted down, my nose size grew up.  Each morning I was greeted by a more swollen, more red, more scabby nose.
"This is just great!" I pouted one day, "I look like a disaster!"
"No, no, no...." Paul comforted me, patting my arm in a calming there-there-there pattern, "maybe more like the clown in the Operation game?"
"Hahaha!" Paul is about the only person who can laugh me out of some of my saddest moments.  

Surgery day arrived and Paul drove me and my now-purple nose to the Juravinski Centre.  We had decided that the only way to deal with this imposter was to accept it.  I refused to name it though and would only refer to it as My Purple Nose (remember, naming gives power to things!  I will NOT empower My Purple Nose!)

We registered, ambled over to the Same Day Surgery waiting room, and made our way inside Same Day Surgery.  There, we were visited by various nurses who gave complex clothing instructions, administered iv hookups and took my vitals.  
Every single nurse began their visit with a tiny gasp, followed by the questioning words, "What is WRONG with your nose?"

Every single time, I would heave a large internal sigh, pull together my tiny, tattered shreds of dignity and respond with "I dunno.  It's just swollen and purple."
The nurses would lean in as close as they would dare - cognizant of the fact that the purplishness could be contagious - and would contort their faces into features of disgust.
"Ew......that's gross."  they would squeal.
"Yep.  Thanks." I would say despondently.  Nothing like bolstering the confidence of a balding, eyebrow-less woman who is facing shape-shifting surgery.
"It's okay, hon." Paul would say each time a new nurse left, "It's not really THAT noticeable."  His attempts to make me feel better worked because he is Paul, my own personal-confidence-salve.

Later that night, after surgery was over and done, I lay weak and pale upon my hospital sheets.  My Purple Nose gleamed like a colourful beacon with a life of its own and became the topic of every conversation I had. 

Perhaps its arrival distracted me from becoming too worried about my mastectomy?  Perhaps my body was growing a new lump to make up for the loss of another lump?  Whatever the reason, when I developed a fever that night, the nurses decided that swabbing my nose was necessary.  
"Maybe you have cellulitis or a staph infection?" they mused together.  One even had the courage to lean in close and delicately swab my swollen sniffer.

A week has passed and My Purple Nose has reduced in size.  It is a pale shade of red and only slightly scabby.  
It is still not dark.  Storms do not rage.  Detectives have not broken down my door and dusted for clues but a mystery remains.  What REALLY happened to my snozzer last week?  Was it a bacterial infection breaking free in the middle of my face?  Was it a physical embodiment of my anxieties?  We will never know and the Purple-Nosed Mystery remains an unsolved case!  

May we all sleep at night!  


(the end)


Yet to Come:
Recovery Room Drama and the Singing Senior.
Jillian Michaels Ain't Got anything on Me and My Post-Surgery Workouts!
Paul - The Wonder Husband and Perfect Care-Giver!
Another Mystery- Will Brigette Ever Learn How to Be Succinct?

Tuesday 26 January 2016

Pre-Surgery Preparations

Before the alarm on my phone could begin its soothing wake-up trills, I was awake.  It was January 21, the day circled on every one of the calendars in our home and the dreaded date that our family had been preparing for for many weeks.  It was January 21, the day of my surgery; the farewell date for my left breast; the next part of our journey with cancer and the beginning of a new me.

I climbed out of bed and dressed in my pre-surgery outfit.  Stretchy, comfy pants, tank top and zip-up sweater.  My mind was not racing with the worry of the day before as I went through my morning rituals.  Wash face.  Get dressed.  Breathe in. Breathe out.  Concentrating on the normalcies; on the everyday, ordinariness of that morning distracted and subtracted from the crazy reality to come. 
"Okay, LORD, this is it," I thought, "help me to trust in You.  This is all in your hands.  Please give me courage today."

My bathroom door squeaked open and the blonde, tousled head of Liam peeked in.
"Hi, mom.  I woke up before my alarm."  He announced.  He had set his alarm for 6:30am so that he could see me and Paul before we left for the hospital that morning.  
"Hi, baby."  I said and enveloped him in a giant hug.  

Soon, Paul was awake and quietly getting ready too.   
Donovan catapulted out of the top bunk into my arms when he saw me creeping in his room to give him a good-bye kiss.  
"Are you leaving, mom?"  he whispered.
"Soon, Dons.  Not yet."  I responded.  Donovan quickly got dressed and joined Liam and Paul downstairs.
I continued my stealthy creeping so I could kiss Gwen and Lochlan good-bye.  They were both in deep sleeps. Gwen's brown hair was a messy halo around her red-cheeked face.  
Smooch, smooch, smooch, I smooched her cute little cheeks, tucked some errant hair-strands behind her ear and whispered, "See you soon, Princess!"
Lochlan was in our bed, where he is most mornings.  He usually wakes up for one reason or another - he has to pee, he's had a bad dream, he is afraid of the dark or the shadows from his night light, he wants a snuggle, he's hungry, he wants to talk about a dream he just had - and then crawls over me to sleep nestled right between me and Paul.  Through-out the rest of the night, he sprawls his tiny body over the middle of the bed, stretching his puny limbs as far out as he possibly can in an attempt to take over as much of the bed as possible.  He punctuates his sleep with sporadic kicks, elbow jabs and arm whacks just to ensure we are both aware that he is there.  That last night, he drop kicked me in the chest.  

He was in a deep sleep in my bed, tiny arms raised above his head like he was in a dream stick-up.
Smooch, smooch, smooch.  I smooched his little flushed cheeks.
"My little King's Son." I murmured because I can't call him "my little Prince" as he is convinced that a "Prince" is a girl.  We have had this discussion many times - a Princess is a girl and a Prince is a boy - but arguing with a 4 year old is about as pointless as arguing with a brick wall in the middle of winter.  Arguing with a brick wall in the summer is also difficult, but it is warmer and, therefore, it feels more like there is a point in there somewhere.  

Downstairs, Crystal, had arrived.  She wrapped me in a wonderful sister hug, her arms steady and strong around me.  
"You'll be okay!  Don't be afraid!  It will all be over soon."  her words were as supportive as her arms around me and I tightened my hold.  Sisters and best friends for life!!

Soon, Paul and I gathered up the over-night bag I had packed the night before, said good-bye to Crystal, Liam and Donovan, and drove to the Juravinski Hospital.

At the hospital, we registered and then began to make our way to the Same Day Surgery location.  On our way, we were intercepted by Roleane Ligtenberg.  Roleane is a breast cancer survivor who has met up with me to offer support, encouragement and advice.  She is an amazing woman; cheerful, strong, and beautiful who is not afraid to use her experiences to help others.  I am so blessed to have come to know women like Roleane and Sonja Heeringa, who have been on this breast cancer journey before.  God yanked my family down this road that we didn't want to go down, but He has given us so much help along the way.  I have never been alone or unguided on my journey!  Thank you, God!
Back to Roleane:  She was dressed in her nursing uniform and ready for her day's work when we saw her.
"Hi guys!" she smiled broadly and wrapped me up in giant, warm hug.  
We chatted for a bit and then she wrapped me and, then, Paul in another hug.  We felt fortified!

Once reception knew I was at the hospital, the wait was short.  Soon Paul and I were called to the back.  Rows of grey-white, pleather chairs where separated from each other by tired looking curtains.  Green clad nurses with clipboards marched cheerfully around.  We were led to our chair and our nurse handed us some hospital gowns.
"Okay, Brigette.  Here is your pajama.  Put it own backwards.  Here is your housecoat.  Put it over the pajamas and on forwards."  She handed over some fresh-smelling, blue-patterned gowns and drew the curtains closed around us.  Though the room buzzed with activity, the closed curtains gave a semblance of privacy.

"Here goes!" I said as I exchanged my clothes for the hospital finery.

"All done?" the cheery voice of our nurse queried before she delicately ripped open the curtains.

"Yep." I retorted.

"Hmm.....no.... you have it wrong."  She drawled and slowly repeated the instructions from before...pajama first and on backwards, housecoat over top and on forwards.  She spun about on her sensible nurse sneakers and swooshed our curtains closed again.

Paul and I giggled as I attempted to correct my clothing mix-up.

At this point, I would like to make some sort of disclaimer:  Perhaps it was my chemo-soaked brain, perhaps it was some anxiety muddling up my thinking, perhaps it was some deep-seated inclination to find the greatest number of combinations possible with the pajama and housecoat; whatever the reason, I managed to incorrectly put on my garments two more times.  That is three times in total because two plus one equals three! Three times my nurse had to swoosh aside the privacy curtains and announce, "You've got it wrong again!!!" The last time, her voice rose to a screech of incredulity.  How stupid was this woman?  She seemed to be thinking (I could read it in her eyebrow furrows).  I was thoroughly embarrassed and Paul was trying not to guffaw.

"Why don't I just help you?" The nurse gently asked after my final blunder.  It seemed the best decision.  I was certain that if the nurse left me alone with the hospital clothes one more time, I would put the pajama on my head and then eat the housecoat.  That seemed the only combination left to consider.



Once I was correctly clothed and almost awarded for that achievement, several more nurses came to put in my iv and further prepare me for surgery.  Paul sat by, mostly quiet except for his one-liners.  When Paul gets nervous, the one-liners just keep coming.  I sat in my comfy chair, now hooked up to my iv and chortled nervously.
"Okay, so this next needle I am going to give you is a blood thinner.  This needle will hurt.  Like a bee sting!" announced a nurse with an unpronounceable last name.
I felt an eye-tick coming on.  Awesome.  A needle.  That hurts.  This day was not getting better yet.
"So where would you like it?" she cheerily asked, gesticulating with the dripping needle.
"In him!" I responded, pointing at Paul to buy me time to find those runaway shreds of bravery deep deep within me.
"Ha hahaha ha," we all robotically laughed and then she suggested my stomach.  "It hurts less there....." she said.
"Go ahead," I sighed and the needle was plunged into me.  All done and only minimal bee-sting pain.  

Then someone new entered into our tiny hospital space.
"Hi Brigette!"  It was my surgeon, Dr. Hodgeson.  She was decked out in her surgery-wear, blond hair pulled back in a pony-tail.  "How are you?"  She went over a few details concerning the surgery that was coming so so soon.  She leaned in close to me, brown eyes soft and compassionate.
"So if you don't mind, I just have to...." she explained and I noticed she was waving a black sharpie in her hand.
What on earth?  my inner thoughts scoffed.  What sort of surgeon is this who wields a sharpie and not a scalpel.  Will she scribble away my problems?  Write black-markered poetry upon my breast?

She took that plain black marker, started writing on my chest.....she said "Come on now, let's fix this mess...." **
(**okay....shh...she didn't actually say that.  I'm borrowing a lyric from Mr. Frank Turner)

Dr. Hodgeson leaned in close, pulled open my pajama/housecoat ensemble and printed her initials over my left breast.  
"NH," she scrawled, "Just to make sure." she stepped back and capped the marker.  
Paul and I laughed nervously, our eyes wide with disbelief.
I was hooked up to iv, garmented, the correct body part had been identified.  I was ready for surgery.
Breathe in.  Breathe out.
"God, please give me strength and courage.  Stay with me....." I prayed.
I held out my hand to Paul. He clasped my hand in his and squeezed tightly.


"The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not be in want.  He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he restores my soul.  He guides me in paths of righteousness for his name's sake.  Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me;...." 
Psalm 23: 3, 4a




Yet to Come:
The Purple-Nosed Mystery.
Recovery Room Drama and the Singing Senior.
Jillian Michaels Ain't Got anything on Me and My Post-Surgery Workouts!
Paul - The Wonder Husband and Perfect Care-Giver!



Sunday 24 January 2016

Farewell

T'was the day before my surgery and much had yet to be done:
We had our children to spend a last, "normal" day with before surgery,
We had our paper-route papers to fold, bag and deliver,
Laundry to wash, dry, and fold,
Rooms to tidy,
A dog to walk,
Lists to be drawn up,
Piano to be practised,
Bags to be packed,
Meals to be prepared, eaten and cleaned up,
Last visits with some family members (my mom, my brother and sister in law),
Phone calls with many family members and friends telling us they were praying for us,
Emails with prayers,
Texts with well-wishes.
There was so much to be done that there was little opportunity for worry.
And then, evening came and we could sit and have a quiet dinner with our children.  We talked one more time about what morning would bring:

"Mom and Dad have to get up early tomorrow to go to the hospital.  If you are not awake, we will kiss you good bye and see you soon, okay?"

"Okay."

"So all your things are packed.  Aunt Crystal will be here nice and early and have breakfast with you and take you to where you are going for a few days.  Are you excited?"

"Well, kind of ..."

"You will have lots of cool and exciting adventures.  And we will see you soon!"

"Are you scared, mom?"

"Only of the needles!  Mom is still a giant needle-suck.  But I'm not scared of anything else, okay?  It's a totally normal, almost-boring surgery for the doctors!  And, God is right there taking care of mom.  Okay?"

"Okay."

"Wanna watch a movie now?"

"YEAH!"

Ah....so thankful for the distraction of tv sometimes!
We watched a movie together and tucked in our beautiful babies:  Liam, Donovan, Gwen and Lochlan.  I may have kissed them many many many many times as we pulled the covers up to their chins and turned out their lights.

"Uh, mom, gross...." but even my one baby-boy who has decided over the past year that he "hates" kisses gave me a kiss on the lips:  "It's a duck kiss, mom!"  he said, bravado trying to win out as I held him.  (It was the sweetest duck kiss ever, Dons, I thought!)

Paul and finished up some last packing and organizing and tried to do normal evening activities.  I felt restless and weird.
How do you prepare to lose a body part?
I had prayed and accepted that this needed to happen.
I knew that a mastectomy was the best medical plan of action to get rid of the cancer.
But I felt like I was betraying a part of myself.
So I sat down at my computer and composed a good-bye letter.  Yes; to my boob (it's how I deal, okay?)
The letter is pretty personal but I will share a few lines (my mom said I should and I almost always listen to her!!):

"Dear Left Breast...

....We’ve had some good times together.  For years, you were flat and I was pretty unaware of you.  But then you went and began to grow.  I recall being pretty embarrassed about that.  I’m so sorry.  I recognize now that that was just a part of my body becoming a woman.  I so loved being a girl that I did not want to acknowledge the fact that I was changing and growing up...  But then mom gently urged me to buy my first bra.  Oh how horrified I was!  
Remember how the immature Grade 7 boys used to snap my bra strap and the bra straps of all the other Grade 7 girls?  I remember being both horrified and strangely pleased.  I was growing up and people were taking notice....

...Remember all those beautiful nursing moments?  It used to hurt when my milk first came in but I would not trade those nursing moments for anything.  Remember Liam, then Donovan?  Remember Gwen, then Lochlan?  You nourished and nuzzled my babies.  You fed them as they cuddled in close.  Those were such sweet, tender and beautiful times.  We spent a lot of time together with those babies….remember all those half asleep night feeds?  They were tough but unforgettable moments…..through half-closed blinds, streetlight lamps gently illuminated you and me and the babies in the quiet moments of the night…

....And then, cancer.  Cancer filled you up and brought me to doctors and tests, biopsies and chemotherapy, and now surgery. 

They are going to take you away.  I will miss you.  I will miss you so much.   You’ve been with me for this whole crazy ride of a life.   But you have to go.  You might make me too sick and I have so much yet to live for.  You will not be forgotten.  Even when and if I decide to have reconstructive surgery and a new breast is made, even then, I will not forget you.  It will not be the same.  You have been there from the start, you have been an important part of me and I will never forget you.

Go easy into the night.
Love Brigette


Weird as that may seem to all of you, writing that farewell letter was cathartic.  I felt much better afterwards.
I kissed Paul good-night, checked on Liam, Donovan, Gwen and Lochlan (giving them many many many more good-night kisses) and then crawled into bed.

Before turning out the lights, I turned to a stack of recipe cards my sister in law, Ashley, had given to me.  On each card was an encouraging Bible text.  I read through them all.....and was struck again how often God tells me to not be afraid.  To not be discouraged.  I love Deut. 31: 8 "The LORD himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.  Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged."  and Psalm 147: 3  "He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds."  Man, what a God!  
Maybe I was pretty nervous about losing a body part but God was right there alongside me.  He was all ready to bind up my wounds and comfort my sorrows.  With all those assurances, there was nothing left to worry about.  
I slept.

- Brigette


Coming soon (when my muscle spasms cease....typing hurts...):

The Sharpie-Markered Surgeon.
The Pajama/ Housecoat Fiasco.
The Purple-Nosed Mystery.
Recovery Room Drama and the Singing Senior.
Jillian Michaels Ain't Got anything on Me and My Post-Surgery Workouts!
Paul- The Wonder Husband and Perfect Care-Giver!




Monday 18 January 2016

Brigette's List

I am a list person.
I love lists.  Lists keep me organized and scheduled.  Lists help me order thoughts that would otherwise butterfly away into chaos.  Lists keep me calm, on time (sort of) and ordered.
So it is natural for me to have made another list in the back of a lovely notebook I received at the beginning of my cancer diagnosis.
This is a list of people; a list of people I know who have fought or are currently still fighting cancer.
My mom, Afke, is on this list.
My dear friend is on this list.
Some women who have become dear friends are on this list.
My cousin's wife is here.....
Herman Faber is here.

I did not write this list to stay scheduled or on time; I wrote this list to see some fellow fighters.
Fellow Cancer Warriors.
To feel encouraged that this journey I am on has been done before.  It is being done right now.  Many of these Cancer Warriors have had cancer in the past and are living the life that God has given them to the fullest now, cancer-free.
I have met with some of these people and they have been so supportive and encouraging; offering up words cloaked in the wisdom that comes with experience.....
"Make sure you have button-up shirts for after surgery!"
"Do those arm exercises after surgery!  They helped me so much."
"Here is a wonderful lotion for your scars.  It's great.  I loved it!"

My list of people includes Cancer Warriors who are still fighting right now.  My mom is part of this list.  We encourage each other from hospital waiting rooms.  We compare tests and results, bruises and bandaids.  We bow our heads and exchange prayers for each other....our whispered words passing each other in the night.

My list of people includes Cancer Warriors who have passed on into glory.  Their bodies could no longer fight.  My brother and sister-in-law's father (Tim & Cara) is on this list.  Herman Faber.  We had walked our cancer walk, fought our cancer fight together for months now.  Inquired into each other's tests.  Shared results.  Checked in on one another at the Juravinski Centre.   Texted or emailed each other encouraging Bible verses....
But God called Herman home.  Last week was a sad week when so many family and friends gathered to sow Herman's body and to mourn his loss.   He will be missed so much.

Some time ago, someone mysteriously placed a poem into my church mailbox.  If this was from you, thank-you.  It hangs on my kitchen wall.

I would like to share this poem:

What Cancer Cannot Do

Cancer is so limited
It cannot cripple love, it cannot
shatter hope.
It cannot corrode faith, it cannot
destroy peace.
It cannot kill friendship, it cannot
suppress memories.
It cannot silence courage, it cannot
invade the soul.
It cannot steal eternal life, 
it cannot conquer the spirit.

Whoever gave me this poem, also placed between each line, these words from Romans 8:37-39:

"Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.  For I am persuaded that neither death, nor life....nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, depth, nor any created things, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our LORD."  

My favourite part of Romans 8: 37-39 is the "more than conquerors" part.   Every warrior dreams of conquering.  Cancer "cannot conquer the spirit" but when we follow God, we are MORE than conquerors through Him!  That is awesome.  Take heart!

Herman, you have fought the good fight and you have more than won!  I hope you are playing a victory song on your tambourine!  God called you home before your loved ones were ready to let you go, but God called you home according to His schedule.   You are still on my list, Herman.  Thanks for often thinking of me when you had enough to worry about already.  Thanks for your encouragements and prayers!  It was an honour to have known you.


"He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty."
Psalm 91: 1