Oct 31 – The Challenge of keeping the faith

Since I was a child Linus has waited for the Great Pumpkin every year. He has faced ridicule from family (sister Lucy) and friends (Charley Brown, Snoopy and others); with all the obstacles to his faith, he remains committed to what he believes.

In this comic strip Linus is quoting from the Bible as people have asked God to deliver them over the centuries. Linus holds on with ferocity to what he believes. Do we hang on to what we believe with a similar ferocity? That is a question we all must answer for ourselves.

 

 


 

Oct 30 – Now is the time to Greet a Marine at Christmas

 

Every year a friend of mine arranges to have volunteers come greet injured Marines who are recovering at the Marine Corps Depot in San Diego, CA.

Part of the volunteers’ activity is to deliver Christmas cards to each Marine. Where ever you live you can help by sending cards to be distributed Christmas morning.

Here are the instructions for helping:

  • Notes, letter, pictures and cards accepted. 
  • Salutation should be “Dear Recruit” 
  • Send all the letters/drawings in one package to the address below. 
  • NO personal return addresses. Use your church’s address so the Recruit will have some idea where the card came from.
  • Mark the back of each note with a classroom sticker or stamp with the school address, if they desire possible responses from recruits.
  • We ask that you not use glitter.

Please mail your letters by December 4, 2017 to the following address:

Marine Moms Online Holiday Project
C/O Mike Atkinson
3755 Avocado Blvd
Box 402
La Mesa, CA 91941

Oct. 28 – The Del Fest Melodrama

Del Fest is an annual music festival held in our county annually. This was the year for a new contract to be signed. The process was as much a melodrama as the bickering of the 2016 Presidential Primary Candidates performed.

There was a lot of misinformation swirling around our county during the negotiation process. A lot of information was reported in our local newspaper. The fact that these behind-the-scenes details hit print media further illustrates the collapse of common sense that prevailed. A new give year contract will be signed on Nov. 3, 2017. That is the best news!

There is some bad news which I will summarize in bullet points below:

  • Until less than 30 days ago the County attorney was not involved in the negotiations.
  • Until less than 30 days ago there had not been even one sit-down meeting with representatives of both organizations present.
  • The contract was being negotiated via email between 2 people, neither of them being a lawyer.

I feel a 5th grade student could have coordinated the process more intelligently than the County Commissioners!

October 27 – Spiritual Care for the Hospice Chaplain

 

 

At Western Maryland Health System, we have a terrific Hospice Team!!

At our Team Meeting yesterday I was presented this card, a wonderful wooden box with a Celtic cross engraved on the top of it and 3 gift cards. Our team holds celebrations for each clinical specialty during their designated week of recognition. So, this week being Spiritual Care Week and with me being the Hospice Spiritual Counselor, I was the lucky recipient of all the special activity. The team knows I love Superman, so the room and the cake were decorated with the colors of Superman.

I really was touched by the personal comments on the card and by all the effort everyone went to for the moment of recognition. Today I am using my blog to issue the Hospice Team a public THANK YOU!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oct 26 – Pastoral Care Week at Western Maryland Health System

Pictured from left to right: Melissa Jessen, Charles Shelquist, Bruce McBride, Paul Demers and Mark Perman

Hospitals throughout the nation are celebrating Pastoral Care Week October 23 – 27, 2017. The picture above was taken at our hospital yesterday when we hosted an information display during the lunch hour. This week we also held our third annual Pastoral Care Banquet with 20 people in attendance. Lew Twigg was honored at his retirement for 24 years as a Volunteer Chaplain Associate. I also received a special card of appreciation and a gift certificate for the extra level of engagement I provided this year when I operated the department during the 5 months the Director’s position was vacant.


 

Oct 25 – Communication Methods Have Changed!

 

 

In 1988 when I was appointed to my first congregation we used the Sunday Bulletin, a monthly newsletter, and the telephone to communicate with the membership. As the image above illustrates social media has added many new ways to share information. There are so many ways to communicate that I have chosen to use email, a blog, and Twitter as my social networks. There is no way I could keep up with the 15 options of social media that are available.

The key to choosing which social media options is enhanced if you which option your members or target audience will be most likely to use regularly. I know I am constantly frustrated because people will tell me to check Facebook for the information. I am not a Facebook account holder and am unable to access their pages. So, telling me I must check Facebook is the same thing as telling me, “sorry we aren’t sharing our information with you”.

We live in an era where accessibility is prime consideration. Organizations should not restrict themselves to only one option of social media or they will leave out communicating with many potential supporters.

 

 


 

Oct. 24 – The Great Gift of Inspiration

 

 

 

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:

Inspiration does not come like a bolt, nor is it kinetic, energetic striving, but it comes into us slowly and quietly and all the time, though we must regularly and every day give it a little chance to start flowing, prime it with a little solitude and idleness. -Brenda Ueland, journalist, editor, and writer (24 Oct 1891-1985) 

Source: www.wordsmith.org

Oct. 23 – A Special Night for the Deaf and ASL Community

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Last night the International Spy Museum and the Gallaudet University Museum held a special night hosting the Deaf and ASL community. I would have liked to attend but was unable to do so. I still think it is a fantastic display of reaching out to a segment of our society that is often not given the consideration due them. I applaud the 2 organizations for making this event a reality and hope it was a positive experience for everyone. It also makes me ask the question, “What can I do for the Deaf & ASL Community here in Allegany County?” I don’t have an answer, but at least I am asking the question which is the first step toward an answer!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Oct 19 – When the test gets more difficult

When I was a student I always preferred it when a text was easy rather than difficult. Peppermint Patty displays that logic in the cartoon shown above. I love her last comment, “I hate it when you have to know what you’re writing about …”

It is entirely too frequent a happening these days when people write on a topic and don’t have the correct facts. Sure writing “off the cuff” may take less time and appear to be less effort. The downfall in this logic is that we end up confusing or misleading those who read what we write and have no idea the negative consequences that are caused when others act upon what we write.

As a Hospital Chaplain, I have make written entries in the medical record of every patient I visit. When I am making the entry I never know ahead of time who will read that entry, when they will read it, or what they are looking to find as they read it. My response it to make sure the entry is correct and concise. Most patients don’t ever see the charting in their medical record. Their healthcare is enhanced when the record is correct and that is why I strive to 100% accuracy in what I write.