On the tenth day of my 'Thirty Days of Thankfulness' I wish to express my gratitude for my home, my abode, my sanctuary, my castle. Since February of 1999, my family has lived in the house pictured at the left. For the last two years, only my husband and me and two Rottweilers rattle around inside.
For the past several months, we've been repairing and remodeling, mostly on the exterior, but we're starting on the interior now. We initially had the roof replaced to fix a few leaks, but the major leak near the fireplace remained unresolved, even though every roofing contractor claimed they could tell right were the leak was and swore it was the roof that was leaking. We finally called a chimney expert who determined our cap was leaking as well as needing some cracked fire brick replaced and some of the brick tuck-pointed. After waiting nearly two months for a torrential downpour (which we received two days ago), we are very happy to report we are completely waterproof around the fireplace. The hole we've had in the great room ceiling for the last ten years can now be repaired in confidence.
I am blessed. My entire life, I have always had someplace to call home, shelter from the storms of nature and life. From a small farm house in rural Leavenworth County, to a dorm room at Wichita State University, to a duplex in south Wichita, to my husband's family home in north Wichita, to another farm house in Benton, back to Leavenworth County, splitting my weekdays in my brother's attic and my weekends either at my parents, where my daughter liver for a year, or back in Benton to visit Terry and Derek, to a rental house in Lansing and finally to our current home. I never left Kansas, except to travel. Depending on what the real estate market does in the next few years, that may change. I hope to follow my daughter to wherever she is accepted for graduate school so I can finally attend her vocal performances in person.
Helping the Homeless
The world's population reached seven billion people recently. Seven billion people, many of whom do not have the assurance of a roof over their head or food to sustain them. In America, it is so easy to become complacent and blinded to the plight of the poor, the homeless, the huddled masses right under our noses. You don't have to look farther than the street corner you just drive by to see the writing on the cardboard. And it's only gotten worse during the 'Great Recession' despite all the political posturing in Washington that does little to provide relief for their suffering. But I'm not one to wait on the government to do what I should be doing in the first place.What's the biggest problem and solution facing the world today? I am. If I made more of an effort to support charities and volunteer my time, then surely I would make a difference, however small, in someone's life. I encourage you to embrace that concept.
Here are a few of the charities I actively support as I am able (from local to international):
- The Salvation Army (Leavenworth, Kansas)
- City Union Mission (Kansas City, Missouri)
- Habitat for Humanity (Kansas City metro area) - Their vision is a world where everyone has a decent place to live.
- Heifer International's mission is to work with communities to end hunger and poverty and care for the earth. By giving families a hand-up, not just a hand-out, we empower them to turn lives of hunger and poverty into self-reliance and hope.
- World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families, and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice.
- Samaritan's Purse - Operation Christmas Child - You still have time to pack a shoebox and track it worldwide!
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