Tic, Tac, Think

Recently one of our local staff wore a shirt with an expression that he didn’t initially understand. First, he had never heard it until seeing it on the shirt. Second, he had not been raised culturally or educationally to think in such a way – “outside the box”. As far as many go his “outside the box” thinking is substantial and yet limited compared to the way many are raised and taught in my culture. 

Although many reading this were raised in culture with some level of “outside the box” instruction I wonder how many of us are stuck in a box that prevents us from moving beyond the social norms of our environment or personal expectations.  I know that I must force myself to move beyond boxes I’ve created or my culture or upbringing might have drawn for me.

Living in a culture that is not your own forces such thinking. Eating food that you were not raised on forces such thinking. Speaking a language other than one’s native tongue forces such thinking. Communicating with people that are different than you, from the “other side of the tracks”, from another nationality, from a different economic class, with a different skin color, from a different faith, of a different age and on and on will help you to “think outside the box” and presumably begin to see and understand things from a different perspective. Seeing things from a different perspective can help one to better engage, encourage, serve, and understand.

After nearly five years living virtually in someone else’s box I’ve come to realize that what I know and understand is a mere fraction of God’s extreme majesty played out not only at the level of men and women in our universe, but from the level of the universe itself to a single cell amid trillions that make up one’s body.   From the cell to the universe I begin to realize that I am but a speck in a creation so vast I must realize that my significance and my reality are quite limited and yet God calls each of His children to be a “light” to the world (Matthew 5:14).

To be a light I must look well beyond myself to the creator who can open the box that I might see beyond its walls and shine a light that is uncontained. “Inside the box thinking” and acting will limit God’s expectation of us. “Inside the box thinking” only allows me to speak to those just like myself. It only allows me to engage a fraction of those whose lives can be touched by the same light that has touched me.

What can I do to understood a box much bigger than the box created by man’s simple thinking? What can push me outside my box that will allow me to show a victory already won (1 Corinthians 15:57, 1 John 5:4) through the “light” (Matthew 5:14) I’ve been commissioned with?

Think of “outside the box” thinkers like: Noah, Moses, David, Abraham, Daniel, Joshua, Caleb, Esther, & Mary who changed the world from their speck on the planet.  Change “your world” by thinking “outside the box” which can change “the” world.

by Bryan Hixson (May 2012)

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An Impossible Dream

Jesus replied, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.” (Luke 18:27)

In America, we love to talk about “the American dream”—that “pulled-myself-up-by-my-own-boot-straps” mentality. We pride ourselves in knowing that anyone could go to school and work hard and become financially successful. America is so very prosperous in the 21st century that many take these things for granted.  In Rwanda, the government is making tremendous progress toward poverty reduction and the education of its children, particularly considering that the Republic of Rwanda is just under 18 years old—she will celebrate 18 years of liberation on July 4, 2012. However, students of low means may still face challenges in affording secondary school fees and expenses, particularly if the student is an orphan.

In April 2009, I wrote about the initiative of the church with which we serve, Christ’s Church in Rwanda (CCR), in which we interviewed 10 girls of need at one of Kigali’s three Schools of Excellence.  The students in this prestigious secondary school are chosen by the Ministry of Education to attend based upon their marks in primary school. A team of interviewers from the church went to interview the girls, intending to choose 6 to support, based upon the church’s budget. After each interview, the headmistress informed the girls to be ready to pack their things and to return to their villages if they were not chosen.  At the conclusion of the interviews, we were convicted that God wanted us to find a way to support all ten girls, and He provided the funds through many generous supporters.  Nine of the girls have finished secondary school; the remaining student will finish next year.

As many of you may know, our family came to Rwanda for the first time in the summer of 2006, commissioned by Oklahoma Christian University (where we were working at the time) to select the first ten Rwandan Presidential Scholars. We continue to have the pleasure of facilitating parts of this program from Rwanda. The elite students eligible for this program are chosen by the Ministry of Education based upon the students’ scores on the Rwandan National Examination, which they take upon completion of their secondary-school coursework.  All the students chosen this year made a perfect score of 55 in various scientific tracks that include a combination (3) of mathematics, chemistry, physics and biology. We were thrilled to learn that one of the ten girls that CCR supports had been among these brilliant students! Allow me to remind you of her story:

She was orphaned in 2004 when both her parents died in the same month from AIDS.  Her 21-year-old sister, a primary school teacher, was left to care for seven siblings, including the youngest who was given the terrible gift of AIDS at birth by her mother.  Her grades in the past year were all perfect scores (equivalent to getting straight A’s in every subject–and she studies math, physics, chemistry, etc.).  Her goal is to study chemistry and become able to run a laboratory that will manufacture medicines to help the sick in Rwanda.  Currently, such medicines are manufactured in Europe, Asia, or the US and must be imported at great expense. 

All the students who pass an English examination administered by the universities choosing students must be interviewed and selected by university representatives in order to become a Rwandan Presidential Scholar. We spent much time praying for her and with her before the interview, praying Scriptures that had been brought to mind by the Spirit on her behalf including the following:

The Lord has not abandoned the work of His hands (Psalm 138:8);
He will carry to completion the good work He started (Phil. 1:6).
We are grateful to be part of His work here. Recently, we were informed that this young lady will be attending Oklahoma Christian University in the fall of 2012.  We praise the Lord for His unfailing faithfulness!

  • Psalm 138:8: The LORD will vindicate me; your love, LORD, endures forever— do not abandon the works of your hands.
  • Philippians 1:6: Being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.

Although she has been selected as a Rwandan Presidential Scholar and much of her schooling will be paid for, there are fees for visa application and supplies that any university student would need. Pray for her continued provision along with others who have received this blessing to study in America.

Written by: Dr. Holly Hixson (March 2012)

Note: The Rwanda Presidential Scholar Program (PSP) is a testament to the Government of Rwanda’s (GoR) efforts to educate a nation and develop sustainable solutions through human capacity development for poverty reduction and economic growth. Rwanda’s recognition and investment in education is a beacon of light for its people as they work together toward the objectives of Vision 2020.  GoR in partnership with a number of universities fund the PSP. Through God’s grace and a nation focused on improving itself through her people, an “impossible dream” became a reality.  Bryan Hixson

Spoken For

“Can a mother forget her nursing child? Can she feel no love for the child she has borne? But even if that were possible, I would not forget you!” Isaiah 49:15 (New Living Translation.) Abandoned in a field by a mother and father, but never forgotten by God. Gloria is in the loving arms of her foster family as she awaits her forever family. All are Spoken For.

Be Hope & Share Life

Each day brings new light to Rwanda and each day that light reveals something new to see. In a land that was once consumed with darkness any ray of light can bring a hope that transcends that which evil can otherwise seem to completely envelope.

For those who have been in a pitch-black room and lit a candle the concept is fairly easy to comprehend. That single candle is enough to see. It is enough to remove fear. It restores confidence that is lost in darkness. If you’ve felt darkness you understand what a ray of hope can come from a listening ear. You understand that a ray of life can come from a consoling friend. You understand a ray of faith that comes in someone stepping together with you from darkness into light. You understand the ray of love expressed in a hug or helping hand.

There is darkness in which we struggle and yet there are those rays of faith, hope, love, and life that keep us moving forward to a prize that is beyond earthly comprehension. It is easy for me to become consumed in personal darkness of fear, pain, anger, or something else. In such circumstances I often find myself learning of someone else’s darkness that makes my dark look like day.  In those situations I am forced to ask myself if I can be a source of light through an ear, a scripture, a hug, or something else.

Recently we committed to sending a young lady (about 30) to school. At the same time the genocide of 1994 took her family it also stole her ability to be educated. So at age 12 she was left to fend for herself and make a way through a broken world.

Her work sustains her, but doesn’t enable her to have the nicer things in life that many of us take for granted (e.g. Running water, hot water, multiple rooms in a house, car or bike, secondary education, etc.)

Life has continued to have very dark moments for our friend and yet she continues to bless us through her heart and her service to us, and others. Not long after we arrived in Rwanda she was violated by evil. That rape resulted in the birth of a child. She also found herself accused of another’s crime which placed her in the depths of darkness and lost hope. That darkness nearly killed her spirit and yet she continued to fight for that ray of hope. Thankfully, God helped me to free her from that darkness and bring to her a new ray of faith in God through His people.

When her friend told me that she wanted to go back to school I realized that there was only one answer that was appropriate for me. We have been financially stretched at times this year and yet I understood that my stretch is for her much more than a ray, rather a glowing light that brings faith, hope, love, and life. As I explained to her that we would help her with her education (beginning back in 6th grade) she couldn’t contain her joy as a smile engulfed the room and tears filled her eyes. For less than $200/year she will have a chance for what we take for granted.

While we can’t meet a fraction of the physical needs around us we recognize that what we take for granted someone else hopes for. We realize that the God we have faith in, someone else doesn’t know.  We recognize that our place in this world is to be a ray of hope & love that others might find a ray of faith to experience the ray of “Life”.

But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his nameJohn 20:31

For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 6:23

And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. Romans 5:5

Sharks and Minnows – Fishers of Men

I am often amazed at the lessons children can teach us in spite of limited life experience. On Friday I was enjoying watching the KICS KG class during PE with Mr. Ty Shelton. They were playing a game some call “Sharks and Minnows”. If you don’t know the game it is the same game kids have been playing since before I was a kid. A piece of ground is marked off as the ocean. There is one individual identified as the shark in the ocean. The rest of the participants are minnows. The minnows must run (swim) from one side of the ocean to the other without being tagged (eaten) by the shark (child). If the shark tags a minnow, the minnow becomes a shark until all minnows have been tagged.

A little girl was the first shark. She appeared to be much slower than the rest of the children so they just ran back and forth by her with no minnows even being threatened. Mr. Shelton stopped the game and asked a little boy to join the girl in the ocean and help her catch the minnows. He was much faster, but not very concerned with catching the minnows so once again the minnows were basically not threatened. Mr. Shelton stopped the game for a second time and told the two sharks to go make a plan. The little girl asked the boy, “what’s our plan?” The boy said, “pray!” So the boy put his hands on her shoulders and she then put her hands on his shoulders, and head-to-head he began to pray. It was a beautiful picture, but there were no cameras except the one in my head that will forever have this image engrained there.

Mr. Shelton looked at me and said, “excellent” then turned to the minnows and said, “minnows you better be careful now, the sharks have a lot more on their side than speed.” The game resumed and almost immediately the two sharks had each tagged one minnow so that the sharks were now four.

The two new sharks were unaware of what had happened that caused them to become sharks, so they called to the two who had caught them and said “what is our plan?” The first little girl told them to join her and her praying friend. She informed them that their plan was to pray. She looked at her friend and said something I couldn’t understand from the distance beyond “….pray.” At that moment the two original sharks put their hands on the shoulders of their new friends forming a circle and the little boy began praying very boldly that through God’s power they would have the speed needed to catch those still not part of their number.

The four became eight and the eight became 16. I couldn’t stop thinking about this beautiful example of prayer and compounding the faithful by giving everything to Him in prayer. There was one stark reminder in the story. One girl was obviously faster than her peers. No matter what way she ran she seemed uncatchable by even the large number of her peers trying to catch her.

She boldly proclaimed to the others in the end that no one caught her. Some will run. Some will deny. Some will scoff. Some will hide. Some will pray and some will find.

Give & Make a Difference

ImageConsider a year-end tax-deductible gift that helps us help students, women, families, and communities through education, development, and faith-based initiatives like Kigali International Community School (KICS), Christ’s Church in Rwanda (CCR), Rwanda Presidential Scholars, Peace Through Business, & Rwandans4Water. Giving details on our personal ROC Partners page or Personal Blog.  (In this picture our youngest is helping children from a local school who are now required to study and learn in English.) An amount of $10, 25, 50, 100 a month ($120, 300, 600, 1200 one-time) can make a huge difference.

Hope Given, Hope Shared, Hope Realized

What does it take to fill a church? Is it a baby dedication, baptism, wedding, funeral, concert, drama, worship, Christmas play, ballet performance, movie, or something completely different?  This season has filled the CCR hall repeatedly. We’ve been blessed to witness all of the above in some form or another. I pray that with each event God is honored. On 25 December near 350 people gathered to worship God and remembered a birth that brought hope. On 26 December around 650 came to mourn the death of a friend, brother, uncle, colleague, and son. On one day we were celebrating a life and a hope that came with that life. On the next day we were mourning the loss of a life in the context of that same hope celebrated one day earlier. In Jesus birth hope came. In our death hope can be realized. May you find hope in Him and may our churches be filled with life and in worship to Him.

Favorite Christmas Gift

My wife made me these two African style shirts, which I’d have to put in my “favorite” Christmas gift column. On the left are two avocado given to my family by a young lady with nothing more to give but a desire to bless. They would have to go in that same column. Both were given with a spirit of love and heart to bless, as was the “gift” this day was named for. All was accomplished. Merry Christmas!

Let Your Christmas Be a “Yes” For Tomorrow

ROC Kids

The ROC kids

Christmas has come and gone in Rwanda. I would love to have spent it with my family in the U.S. at a temperature below 85 degrees with a feast and football game after church. The season here has passed without seeing a single Christmas-based advertisement or hearing a single Christmas jingle. It has passed without seeing an angel tree, or hearing Christmas tunes being pumped through the mall. It has passed without a special sessional Sonic drink. There were no Christmas parades or lights on homes.  Yet, for all the “no’s” there are plenty of “yes’s”. I have my lovely wife and daughters with whom I enjoyed celebrating. Family and friends from the U.S. blessed us with some gifts shipped thousands of miles at horrendous rates. We have wonderful colleagues to share the holiday with who also mourn the distance of loved ones on special days. We were blessed to worship with a wonderful community in a facility that was no doubt a “yes” from God to go and do His work. We enjoyed the events our school and church hosted as wonderful ways were found to project the love of baby who would become the King to a community of beautiful people.  Tomorrow much of the world returns to its folly with many forgetting what stopped them for a moment today. JOY, PEACE, LOVE, HOPE, FORGIVENESS …  they don’t stop today.  May your Christmas be the beginning of 364 more days of the same.  Let your Christmas be a “yes” for tomorrow.

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Donations:

ROC Partners
Attn: Jeanise Morton
3007 NW 63rd, Ste 205
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
Memo: BH

http://www.rocpartners.org/hixsonshttp://bryanhixson.wordpress.com

12 in 2012

Hello friends and family. We greet you in the name of Jesus during this season of hustle and bustle and hopefully Christmas cheer. No doubt your year has been filled with blessings and challenges, as has ours. To not recognize the blessings of our year would be to not honor what God has done for us. To not recognize the challenges would be to not give God the glory for carrying us through each one of those challenges.

The work God called us to in Rwanda always has its challenges, and yet it always has its rewards as we are blessed to serve in a way where we can often see the fruits of our labor and know your prayers and support are lifting us up.

As you consider your end of year giving or giving for 2012 we’d ask you to consider the 12-12-12 plan to help us secure the funding we need for the upcoming year. We would like to ask that you pray about and consider becoming a financial partner in our work. Without people like you we could not be in Rwanda doing God’s work through education, community development, and faith building.

Next year is 2012. There are 12 months in a year. We are asking that you become a partner for 2012 in any ratio of 12. For example, an amount of $120 or $1,200 would equal $10 or $100 a month. You might also choose to give $12/month, or $12 for each person in your family who will receive a Christmas gift from you, or $12 for every time you say something you regretted saying, or $12 every time you go to a movie. Be as creative as you like with the use of 12.  That is the 12-12-12 plan.

It is interesting to note that 12 is considered one of the perfect numbers (ex. Rev. 21) from a Biblical perspective. Genesis 12 starts with a call from God to Abram to leave the land he was living in and go where God tells him. God’s people would become a testimony to all nations of the one true God. We believe God called us to this same message and same testimony and thus we left our land to serve as ambassadors for Christ in Rwanda, Africa.

If you would like to partner financially in this ministry through a 12-12-12 plan (or give another amount one-time or monthly) then you can go to ROC Partners and click “Donate to the Hixsons” to schedule credit card or checking account partnerships. To those of you already praying for us and/or giving to our financial need – THANK YOU!

To donate by mail write a check to ROC Partners with “BH” in the memo and mail to:

ROC Partners

Attn: Jeanise Morton

3007 NW 63rd, Ste 205

Oklahoma City, OK 73116

memo: BH

We appreciate your love, support, friendship, and prayers. To read pieces we’ve written throughout the year find us on the web at http://bryanhixson.wordpress.com.

In His service,

Bryan, Holly, Alexis, & Grace Hixson

Blog  http://bryanhixson.wordpress.com
ROC Partners http://rocpartners.org
KICS http://kicsrw.org 

KICS Fun

KICS Elementary Christmas Play

KICS enjoyes a number of community events in Nov-Dec. In November KICS hosted the Festival of Fun previously known as the Fall Festival. In December KICS hosts multiple Christmas events including this play presented to students and parents by grades K-4. The second showing will be Thursday evening (Dec. 8).

KICS Festival of Fun

 


Compound Your Blessing This Christmas

As we approach one of the most celebrated holidays of the year I can’t help but wonder what it is that motivates its celebrants.  Sitting several thousand miles away from the colors, lights, sounds, and smells of the holiday in America makes me really appreciate some of the season’s traditions, festivities, and fellowships stateside. The season motivates me to give thanks for God’s provision of my family. It motivates me to remember the greatest gift given, and it is that gift for which we serve – Jesus!

However, if I’m honest with you that is not all that the season makes me think of. Just a couple of days ago I was wishing I could go to Home Depot where I knew I could get a couple things we needed for a project. I was wishing I could run into Kohl’s to pick up a new pair of black dress pants realizing that mine are sun faded from repeated drying on the line. I wished for a moment that I could run into Quizznos and grab my favorite sub sandwich.  I wished there was a Sam’s Club to pick up a flat screen, which we’ve learned to manage without for the past 53 months. I wished I could run to Wal-Mart or Target to grab a few things for my daughter’s upcoming birthday. I began to lust over the Hardware department of Sears and the electronics of Best Buy.

For that moment I found myself lost in what I couldn’t get my hands on, but what I wanted. Then my daughter put a movie on the computer and from a distance I began to listen. I found myself drawn in quickly and pulled up a chair and watched the story I’ve heard a 1000 times as if it was the first – “The Nativity”. The paradox of simplicity and complexity of this timeless story held me captive.

A baby is born. The world around him moves no different than at any other time. The baby cries and cattle and sheep are disturbed. The baby is a king and yet he sleeps in a box where cattle are fed. The baby’s mother has just given birth to God and names him Jesus. The stable reeks of manure and urine as God sleeps in the presence of animals. God’s well being as a baby is placed in the hands of a chosen teenage girl and a simple carpenter. This baby would become the salvation of the world, but on this starry night this baby is completely dependent on simple faithful servants.

This day would be like none other, as these servants of God, now servants of a baby, had become parents to a king before a court of cattle and sheep and a few smelly strangers from the field. The wise would later join them and honor a call recorded as the Star of David. In that simple night so long ago our world changed in a relative silence that screamed of hope through Hosanna in the Highest.

As I thought of new clothes I desired I saw Mary wrap Jesus in a simple cloth that survived a very long journey on a donkey. As I thought about my favorite big burger at Chile’s I saw Joseph give Mary the only food he had. As I thought about desired hardware from Lowe’s I realized that a birth just took place with not a single medical instrument, doctor, or midwife in the stable – except the “great physician” who was being birthed.

I realized that God had come to be with us. I realized that hope had entered the world. I realized that for a moment much of the world stops and listens to the sound of hope amid the noise of dispair. I also realized that much of the world celebrates – not a birth, not a hope, but a shirt, a bike, a car, a tie, or a toy.  I realized that many have sent me to share that hope. I realized that His provision is your hand reaching out to make a difference. I realized that His provision is your prayer anointing my family to His service.

I realized that without you my family does nothing. I realized that your gift is a compounding of God’s blessing. As you bless us, we are able to bless others. As we bless others they do the same. That birth was the beginning of compounding blessings for generations. Your gifts help us to share the timeless gift of Jesus.

As Christmas approaches and you consider what motivates your celebration, please consider compounding your blessing. We would be blessed in your partnership with us and know that God will bless you in your faithful giving.  Consider a gift off $10/month ($120/year),  $100/month ($1200/year), or maybe even $1000/month ($12,000/year). Any amount given monthly or one-time is a blessing to us that is compounded through service to others and through the blessing received in giving.

GIVING METHODS

  • Monthly bank draft (contact us for a form)
  • Credit Card 1-time or monthly can be done securely from http://www.rocpartners.org/Hixsons
  • Check: use address below

Contributions to the Hixson’s ministry in Rwanda can be made to:
Rwanda Outreach & Community Partners
3007 NW 63rd, Ste 205
Oklahoma City, OK 73116-3605
Memo: BH


Little Things Make a Difference

The little things make a difference! Life lost is part of everyone’s world. For those with Christ hope remains as we consider one day the loss will not be ours, rather the loss will be us. This past week I learned of the loss of a childhood friend (Bill Nix) to a heart attack at age 42. Every loss comes with its memories and its pains. In this loss I’m filled with good memories of a childhood friend, and a realization of how little things can make a difference.

While I haven’t seen Bill more than once since graduation in 1987 I can quickly recall the goodness of his heart from those days of youth.

I believe it was 1976-77 the first time I met Bill. At that time, I was a less than popular 3rd/4th grader who was a bit chubby and shy. I stayed to the background while desiring to become part of the foreground. Part of my memory of that period was teams choosing sides and often being the guy left out. I’d make my way over to a lonely swing and sit on it wondering how I might make my way into the crowd of desirables. While it would be some time before that would happen there was a change that occurred with the arrival of a new “stallion” of sorts.

That “stallion” arrived sometime into the school year. He seemed tall although that was probably reflected more through his thin build, dark hair, and new running shoes. He seemed to wear a permanent smile, and joyful demeanor that immediately attracted most every kid across at least three grades including me. While I can’t remember details, I remember him making a significant impression on the boys with what seemed a strange desire to run. I remember him running around our rather large playground with many other boys following behind, but unable to keep up. I knew I couldn’t keep up so I kept my distance and watched what now seems a boyish “marking” of territory. While I don’t believe this marking was conscious it was definitely perceived this way by the other stronger and faster boys who previously “owned” the playground. Bill didn’t seem to care who owned what, he just did what he did, smiled and made friends. Within a few days the playground was his and the tone of the playground seemed to became more friendly and welcoming to the less desirables. While my “playing time” on the playground basketball court or football field didn’t increase substantially, it did increase as there was a new tone that meant more inclusion.

Around the same time another new boy Duane (Bolton) Kroeker moved to town and befriended me almost immediately. He was a strong and athletic boy who seemed to take a special interest in some of those on the bottom of the popularity pole. His stature often yielded him position of team captain. From that position he almost always picked an undesirable (me) first. Bill seemed to honor that posture and do the same until it almost became a rule of the playground. It didn’t matter who you were if you wanted to play, these two boys would often work to find a way for inclusion. Until now, I had never thought about how the action of these boys forever played a part in how I interact with others.

With Duane’s friendship and encouragement my confidence began to grow. While I wasn’t the strongest or fastest, his engaging me gave me opportunity and confidence that I otherwise would not have had. Likewise, Bill’s seeming acceptance of all from his position of popularity meant the game was never “locked,” rather there was some level of opportunity for most who wanted to participate. At the same time my father got me playing soccer. I recognized that there were multiple purposes in his encouragement, but later was able to see his wisdom as I quickly grew in strength, endurance, and speed. I did not realize to what degree I was changing physically, and being encouraged by my father and Linda Edwards (friend and soccer coach) as I still perceived myself at the bottom of the pecking order.

While playing a fairly unpopular sport I was growing mentally and physically much more than I knew. While Duane moved away later in elementary, Bill remained but was not really in my spectrum of attention much again until 7th grade and the first day of football practice.

I had grown to be one of the taller and heavier boys in a class of over 200 students. That new stature had come with strength and speed that I didn’t know was there. Prior to that first football practice my father had encouraged me do what I wanted to do when it came time to choose a position to try out for. He made it clear that it would be difficult, but I needed to follow my heart. I did not want to be a lineman but my size and peer expectation said that was the obvious position.

The time came and the coaches told us to go to a specific location on the field based on what we wanted to try out for. The whistle blew and everyone made his choice. I stood there a bit too long and got an additional whistle and my name called out by Coach Gwartney to go with the linemen. I turned and ran exactly the opposite direction to the running backs. There was a bit of commotion that ensued as coaches and peers informed me, that I was in the wrong place. I refused to go with the linemen until the coach said I could only stay with the running backs if I could outrun all of those who were wishing to try out for that position. We (running backs) were put on the line and had to run 3 – 40 yard dashes. To my surprise, and likely everyone else’s, I won all three of those races. That did not satisfy the coaches, or perhaps they were trying to prove some other point. Coach then declared that I would have to outrun who we believed to be one* of the fastest boys on the team, Bill Nix, who had gone with the receivers when that first whistle blew. At this point I was certain my career as a running back was coming to an abrupt end after only 10 minutes. Now the whistle blew one more time and this whistle defined much of my next 6 years. (* seem to remember Shane Davis also having to run with Bill & me.)

I outran Bill by a whisker. A few high-fives were exchanged and I was welcomed to the core of backs and receivers. Just as had been the case back in 3rd grade Bill welcomed me to “the team”. Whether that day was a fluke, some guys helping me along the way, or I was truly faster or not I remember it as the beginning of great friendships with other boys who were all team players and welcoming of me. Stephen Turley and Casey Harrel were two of those who truly made me feel like I was worthy to be in the backfield with them. As I recall, it was another friend, Teece Chambers, with his gift of verbal affirmation who named Turley and I “Shake & Bake”. I was the “bake” half of the equation as Stephen was definitely quicker with more agility. I just ran over guys until everyone else began to outgrow me.

Bill was one of many great guys who I was blessed to grow up with and will always carry fond memories of. I was blessed to be in what I believe was the best class to graduate Pryor High School because of guys like these (Shane, Donnie, Casey, Stephen, Steve, Teece, Junior). I could name dozens of others whose actions and words influenced me and helped shape me as a boy. These guys from the football and basketball teams in grade 7-9 made a big difference in my world. Those three years forever changed me and gave me a confidence that I previously did not have and you guys were all a part of the genesis of that. I regret that it takes one’s death to realize what a big impact little things can have. Bill – you made a difference!

My Trash Her Sustenance

“Are you kidding me, she is eating from our trash?” I’ve observed this before and have fed many who remove our trash. It pains me to see a soul so hungry that they would consume our molding, rotting, half-eaten rubbish. As she picks through every single item in the trash I can’t help but wonder what the life of one so desperate might be like. Today she walked away eating food that included a chocolate birthday cupcake loaded with icing that came from the kitchen, not the trash. She walked away with pockets filled with items we disposed of that for her had value. She also left with a smile that formed following the rush of tastes you could tell had never crossed her lips from a simple cupcake that I or any of our supports consume when we so chose. I look at my limited inflow of personal funding at times and ask God why does it have to be so hard. Then I look at this young hungry garbage collector picking through my trash and think how blessed I am. For those of you making it possible for me, and my family, to eat from the kitchen table rather than out of a trash – thank you. Today you fed me; you fed my children, and my garbage collector. Every day we are fed because of God’s provision and we are able to bless others with physical and spiritual food.

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