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10 Ways to Stay Husband and Wife for Life

My newsfeed on Facebook this week has been filled with images of beautiful weddingsnew husbands and wives. Gorgeous brides are clad in lacy bridal gowns, handsome grooms sport tuxes (and sometimes cowboy boots), and receptions look like settings for fairy-tales.

It’s beautiful to see young love in bloom, to see excitement and dreams for the future in the eyes of the bridal couple. But to me, it’s even more beautiful to see old love in bloom—the couples who’ve withstood the test of time, the ones who’ve truly lived their wedding vows, and have come to their golden years still in love and still holding hands.

So how does one accomplish that? I’ve been thinking about that a lot this week because in addition to all the happy wedding updates, my week also has been filled with news of couples who are calling it quits, men and women who stood before God and their family and friends pledging “till death do us part.”

I’m troubled by how many lives are destroyed in the aftermath of divorce and affairs, and especially for the children whose lives and security are shattered when their parents split up. It’s not worth it, folks! So here are a few thoughts God put on my heart this morning. Click here to read my 10 tips to keep your marriage strong.

10 Tips for Enjoying Your Class Reunion

In my experience there are three schools of thoughts when it comes to class reunions: There are those who wouldn’t miss theirs on a bet, those who wouldn’t attend one if their lives depended on it, and the rest of us, who find the prospect of reconnecting with our former classmates both intriguing and daunting.

I’ve always taken the approach that a class reunion will definitely be interesting, and it just might prove to be fun. I attended my (gulp) 40-year reunion a few weeks back, and, like the trio of 10-year gatherings that preceded it, it was not only less painful than I might have feared, it was downright enjoyable.

Skeptical? I understand. But hear me out: Following the reunion, I turned to my classmates on the Facebook page we’d used to organize the event and asked them for tips that might help those people who were hesitant to take the plunge to enjoy the experience, and I have to say, the class of ’76 came through with flying colors. Here are 10 indispensable tips for making the most of your next reunion, even if it happens to be your first.

1. If it’s the first time you’ve attended a reunion, whether you graduated ten years ago or thirty, make plans to go with a friend.

It helps to have someone you’re close to who can serve as “home base” as you try to overcome your nerves (almost everyone experiences a bit of nervousness at a reunion) and reach out to your former classmates.

READ MORE: SCHOOL SUPPLIES AND MORE!

2. Peruse your old yearbook before you go.

This tip grows more useful with every passing decade. If you’re just ten years removed from high school, chances are pretty good that you’ll recognize everyone at the reunion, but after forty years, I can tell you from first-hand experience, not all the faces you’ll encounter will be so familiar. And when you do recognize former classmates, you may briefly struggle to recall their names. A little time with your yearbook could a long way toward alleviating both problems.

It’s also a good idea to bring your yearbook along to the reunion. Your friends who are struggling with all those not-so-familiar faces and names will thank you as they sneak a quick peek at it.

3. Use Facebook to (re)connect with folks ahead of time.

Facebook and other social media outlets have really had an impact on the reunion experience. Ten years ago, at my 30-year reunion, I had very little idea what was going on in the lives of my classmates or, in some cases, how their appearance had changed.

But this time, I was familiar going in with the basic circumstances of many of my classmates’ lives and was able to quickly move beyond the typical catch-up chatter (and in some cases, to avoid asking awkward questions) and spend some quality time with them.

READ MORE: ONE OF THE CROWD

4. Be proactive.

Don’t sit at a table waiting for classmates to approach you. It’s perfectly normal to feel shy or be nervous—everyone goes through that—but try to push past it. Just find a familiar face or two and say hello. It won’t take long at all before those nerves dissipate.

5. Introduce yourself when greeting a classmate you’ve not seen in years.

Don’t put people on the spot by asking them if they remember you. They may recognize your face right away, but still experience momentary difficulty in recalling your name. That happens to most of us at one time or another, so simply state your name when saying hello. Believe me, your former classmates will appreciate it.

6. If you sometimes feel you don’t know what to say, ask others to tell you about their lives.

As you learn about the paths your classmates have followed through life, you’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll be inspired, and you’ll be reminded that everyone goes through good times and bad. It’s one thing we all have in common.

7. Look at everyone with new eyes and a forgiving heart.

If you encounter someone who hurt or offended you in high school, try to let bygones be bygones. Chances are, they don’t remember the incident and if they do, they are very likely now sorry for their behavior. Give everyone you encounter at the reunion a pass on the past and you’ll be pleasantly surprised at how decent and kind most of your classmates have turned out to be.

8. Don’t compare your insides to anyone else’s outsides.

With each passing year, the social pressures of high school—the resentments, the rivalries, the unrequited affections—fade away, but many of us are still tempted to compare our lives with others’. You may encounter some people at your reunion who appear to be especially prosperous and happy, but we can’t always know someone else’s pain or troubles, past or present.

READ MORE: DOES NOSTALGIA MAKE YOU HAPPY?

After a decade or more, it’s a good bet that every person in the room has experienced setbacks and heartbreak as well as good times, so be happy for those who appear to be doing well, sympathetic to those who might be struggling, and embrace your own journey, wherever it has led you.

And most of all, don’t worry about your weight, your hair (or lack thereof), your wrinkles, or what you’re wearing. Before you know it, you and your classmates will all feel as if you are back in high school and you won’t even know notice the changes the years have wrought.

9. Spend time with people you didn’t know very well back in the day.

This is one aspect of reunions that can be very rewarding, especially for those of us who went to larger schools. There were more than 450 people in my graduating class, for example; there’s no way I could have been close with them all.

At the past couple of reunions, though, I’ve had the chance to become better acquainted with some former classmates I was only casually acquainted with back in the day, and it has been a gift. Not only can you reconnect with old friends at your reunion, you just might make some new ones.

10. Don’t talk politics—focus instead on the memories.

This was especially good advice for me, as my recent reunion took place during this heated election season, but it’s a good policy for any such gathering. Who needs friction when old friends have convened to celebrate the bonds they share?

If you follow the above advice, I think you’ll find your reunion to be a positive experience, one that is not only interesting but rewarding and fun.

Our thanks go out to the members of Oklahoma City’s John Marshall High School, Class of 1976, who contributed their wisdom, experience and insights to this story.

10 Life Tips from Henry the Dog

This is Henry. He has only one eye. We’ll come back to that. My partner and I love dogs but travel often and wouldn’t want to subject a pet to a life of kennels. When we’re not traveling, we work from home, which leaves us long stretches to offer attention, comfort and love to a dog who needs it. So we decided to foster. When we met Henry, a four-year-old papillon mix, there was no doubt: He should live with us until he found a permanent home. We were happy to have his company and committed to teaching him a few things, one of which was not to bark so much. What I didn’t realize was that this beautiful one-eyed creature had a lot to teach me too.

GET THE NEW DAILY DEVOTION FOR ANIMAL LOVERS

1. Everyone has a story. A family first adopted Henry from a pound, but as it turned out, they weren’t a good match. That’s how he ended up in a rescue, where we found him. We were told he didn’t get along with the family’s children and its other dog, but it’s hard to know for sure (and Henry wasn’t talking). It reminded me that you can hear things about others, but you’ll never really know the truth unless you were there. We weren’t there. We just accepted Henry and loved him.

2. Accept the things you cannot change. The vet said Henry was probably born without a second eye. I like to think he looked around, saw others who have two eyes and thought, Two? How can you even see out of both at once? There’s power in accepting the things you can’t change. Henry didn’t mind that he was missing an eye. And he certainly couldn’t will himself to have a second eye. He never let having only one eye stop him from living his best life. We all have our “second eye.” The closer we can get to having an attitude like Henry’s, the better off we’ll be.

3. Let others lift you up. Henry was too short for some of the things he wanted to do, like getting on our bed at night. He would scramble on the floor from one side of the bed to another, hoping to find the low side. (There was no low side.) In the end, one of us would always pick him up and set him on the bed. It’s okay to rely on others. Being independent isn’t the same thing as being insistent on doing everything yourself. Sometimes there’s strength in letting others carry you.

4. Live in the now. Our human brains can be our greatest weakness. I can’t prove it, but I’m convinced Henry didn’t know how to hold a grudge and that he thought little, if at all, about the future or the past. He was all about the now. If you told Henry that he was going for a walk, he thought you meant he was going for a walk right now. There was no later, and there was no before. There was only this moment. Stay present like Henry.

5. Find your peanut butter jar. Life is too short for half-hearted endeavours. I learned this from watching Henry spend hours digging into a nearly empty peanut butter jar. When he finished, the jar was licked clean as far as his tongue could reach. His dedication was admirable. Find the thing you love and give yourself over to it.

6. Be a good listener. Henry never interrupted. He never made things about himself. He never brought his baggage to a conversation. When I spoke, he was patient and tilted his head adorably to indicate his engagement. Being a good listener means contributing to someone else’s well-being without saying a word. Whether you tilt your head is up to you.

7. Don’t dwell on the negative. Step on Henry’s foot while he watched us make dinner? He howled for an instant, then went right back to hoping for scraps. Nip his ear while I attached his collar? He got over it before I realized what happened. Maybe Henry’s neurocapacity didn’t allow him to dwell on the negative because, well, dog brain. But we can choose how to expend our mental energy—why waste it on something that upsets us?

8. Don’t let anyone tell you you’re small. Henry didn’t weigh more than 15 pounds soaking wet, a fact he seemed blissfully unaware of. If he saw something that unnerved him, he barked. It wasn’t a booming or menacing bark that would alert others or frighten his target. But that never stopped him. He would speak up whenever he thought something was wrong, even if his voice was small.

9. Exercise, drink plenty of water and rest. This would probably mean more coming from, say, a doctor than a dog foster, but here we are. And the essential truth is undeniable. Henry went for three or four walks a day, followed up with a healthy drink of water and always made sure he got his sleep. No late-night Netflix benders for him. It seems simple, but we humans often wind up off track, make poor choices, then have to deal with the consequences. Take care of yourself. Henry never regretted getting up and out—you won’t either.

10. Let it roll right off you. People would sometimes stop us on walks. Did they ask about Henry’s hobbies? Admire how well he behaved on a leash? Never. It was always about the eye. Every time. It annoyed me. But you know what? Henry didn’t care. You may say that he didn’t understand, and I concede that. Our ability to process language means we do not have that luxury. But we can still get ourselves to the same place as Henry. And the sooner we do, the more we can enjoy life. Henry lived with us for a month. Then he got adopted. The best part? His forever home is with my mother-in-law. He lives six hours away now, but we still have his leash ready for when he visits. And a peanut butter jar.

Did you enjoy this story? Subscribe to All Creatures magazine.

10 Lessons Military Families Learn

Sometimes having a loved one in the military can make us feel like we’re from another planet. Things we take for granted make no sense to our civilian friends. I’m going to give the rest of the world a peek about things a military family learns when a loved one enlists:

1) Not just soldiers.
Those in the Navy are sailors, those in the Marine Corps are Marines, and those in the Airforce are Airmen. Only those in the Army refer to themselves as soldiers. “Service Members” or “Troops” are the acceptable generic terms for those in the military.

2) Acronyms aplenty.
MOS (Military Occupation Specialty), FPO (Fleet Post Office), PCS (Permanent Change of Station), CO (Commanding Officer) and XO (Executive Officer) are just a few of the terms that actually make sense to us.

Read More: Giving Our Troops the Power of Hope

3) Boots that are not footwear.
This is also a term for those who have graduated boot camp but haven’t yet been on deployment.

4) Defining a civilian.
Anyone who does not have a loved one in the military is considered a civilian.

5) Digging deep for bravery.
Sending a loved away to war with a smile and a hug is one of the bravest things I’ve ever seen.

6) Telling military time.
When someone asks us the time, we’re as apt to come out with “eighteen hundred hours” as we are “Six o’clock.”

7) Seeing the price of freedom.
For us, it’s not a concept. The price of freedom brings the face of someone we love to the forefront of our minds.

8) Never missing a call.
During deployment, there’s nothing more precious than hearing the voice of a loved one. That static-filled, 30-second conversation is a lifeline. I’ve seen family members dive over furniture, leap across toddlers and upend a bottomless seeming purse to avoid missing that call.

9) True heroism.
It has very little to do with mighty acts. Instead it’s made up of the quiet fulfillment of duty—no matter the cost.

10) Trusting God.
He’s able to provide protection, comfort and peace—even when the world around us is filled with worry, fear and war.

Having a loved one in the military really isn’t so different or scary, once we get used to it. God is always with us, no matter how frightened we feel.

10 Easter Traditions (Old and New)

On Easter morning, families will come together to celebrate the holiday with their favorite traditions. But do you know the origin behind all your Easter customs? Are you interested in changing things up and maybe adding a new way to celebrate. Here are 10 Easter traditions—five of our favorites and five new ones to try—so you can make the most out of Easter 2023.

READ MORE: 40 Beautiful Easter Quotes to Share

Favorite Easter Traditions

Family decorating Easter eggs together for their family tradition

1. Decorating Easter eggs

Decorating Easter eggs is a custom that originated as far back as the 13th century, yet it is still a popular tradition amongst families today. Eggs are associated with the Easter story because they represent beginnings and new life. Countries all over the world have their own customs. Like pysanky, the Ukrainian art of decorating Easter eggs with hot beeswax and dye. Or the Belgium custom of dying eggs with red onion skins and leaves.

READ MORE: 10 Easter Eggs from Around the World

With so many different styles, there really is no “right way” to decorate your eggs. When you make your own, you can use crayons, food coloring, stencils, or even paint. Decorate your eggs with images of things that bring you hope—a blooming flower, a shining sun, or your favorite animal.

Colorful easter eggs on a blue background for an Easter tradition

2. Easter egg hunts

After your eggs are decorated, head outside to hide them for an epic Easter egg hunt. Some historians believe this tradition dates back to the 16th century, when the priest Martin Luther organized an Easter egg hunt for his congregation. Even after so many years, churches, communities, and families still take part in this fun custom.

If you are hiding them for kids or grandkids, make a map showing where all the eggs are hidden. Encourage the kids to work together so no one feels left out. Even though this Easter tradition is geared toward kids, that doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy it as an adult. Surprise your partner or spouse on Easter morning with your own Easter egg hunt. You can do it around the house, in the yard, or even use a map to make it a town or city-wide egg hunt.

Mother and son hold Easter eggs in a basket for their Easter tradition

3. Easter baskets

The Easter tradition of Easter baskets began during medieval times when people would exchange baskets to celebrate the end of Lent. Nowadays, kids and grandkids wake up on Easter morning to find a colorful basket (perhaps from the Easter bunny) filled with decorations, candy, and toys. Keep this tradition alive within your own family by making a new and unique Easter basket every year. Consider making them not just for the kids, but also for your friends, neighbors, coworkers, or people you know who may be spending their Easter alone. This tradition is a great way to give something small and let someone know that you are thinking about them.

People attend a church service for their Easter tradition

4. Attending an Easter service

On Easter Sunday, people across the country will wake up early and dress up for Easter service. Many churches host special services and events on the day, like choral concerts and festivals. If you are considering attending an Easter service, bring the whole family and then some. See if there is anyone in your life who wants to join you. Perhaps someone who does not have anyone else to go with. Make a day of it by going out for lunch after and sharing your favorite parts of the service.

If you are not attending an Easter service this year, there are plenty of ways to celebrate Easter at home. Gather the family together and try one of these traditions:

READ MORE: The Easter Story in 14 Bible Passages

Five kids doing the tradition of an Easter egg hunt with baskets

5. Attend an Easter Parade

Easter parades are a tradition that started back in the 1800s, when people would promenade (or take a leisurely walk in a populated area) after Easter services. They eventually evolved into their own events that take place on the city streets. Many classic parades also include a bonnet contest where people can show off expertly crafted bonnets and win a prize. Google to see if there is an Easter parade in your town or city and make a day of it with the whole family. There are sometimes petting zoos, magic shows, face painting, and rides.

New Easter Traditions

Brother and sister lie in a field doing their Easter egg tradition

1. Have an Easter egg scavenger hunt

This year, instead of doing the usual Easter egg hunt by searching all over the house or yard, try starting a new tradition by having a family scavenger hunt. Begin with a clue that will lead the participants to the first egg. In that egg, put a clue for the next egg. Then keep going until they find the ultimate prize at the end—perhaps a treasure trove of goodies or an Easter basket. You can have the scavenger hunt lead people around the house, around the neighborhood, or even around your whole town. Pick spots that are family favorites, like a playground, a restaurant, or a school.

Couples looking for a way to make Easter special can take up this tradition as well. Make a scavenger hunt for your spouse or partner as an Easter surprise. Pick sports that are important for you both, like where you met, the spot for your first date, the first place you kissed, or the place where you got married. End the scavenger hunt with a special Easter dinner or an Easter gift.

Family doing their tradition of an Easter dinner

2. Share hope during Easter dinner

Easter dinner is a wonderful time for everyone to come together and enjoy some good food and laughs. Make the meal even more special by focusing on what this season is about: hope. Sharing what hope means to us with our loved ones can bring us closer together and help us dig deeper into the spiritual importance of this season. Here are some prompts to get you all started:

  • What does hope mean to you?
  • What brings you a sense of hope?
  • What are you hopeful for in the future?
  • How can you bring hope to others?

READ MORE: 7 Spring Prayers for Hope and New Beginnings

Couple having their traditional Easter bonfire together

3. Have an Easter bonfire

The Easter custom of lighting a bonfire is actually an old tradition originating from Germany. It is meant to symbolize a light within darkness (like the Resurrection) and the end of the winter season. Bring this custom into your own family’s Easter celebrations. You can do this by lighting a fire pit in your backyard (be sure to check your neighborhood’s fire safety laws) or seeing if your community does a bonfire every year. As you gather around the fire, take turns reading an Easter Bible verse or quote, sharing any lessons you learned during the chilly winter months, or saying what you look forward to in the spring season.

Two people holding hands in forgiveness for their Easter tradition

4. Forgive someone

Singer Reba McEntire once said, “Easter is very important to me. It’s a second chance.” Let this season be the opportunity to give someone a second chance. Like Jesus forgiving our sins, we can embody this grace in our own Easter celebrations. Whether it’s a friend you’ve fallen out with, a coworker who bothered you, or a neighbor you never got along with, now is the time to approach life with an attitude of acceptance and mercy. Here are some ways to reach forgiveness for a past wrong:

  • Write down what made you sad or angry on a piece of paper. Then tear up the paper, letting it go with each tear.
  • Tell the person that you forgive them, whether in person or by letter.
  • Read Bible verses or pray about forgiveness to understand it on a deeper level.
  • Don’t forget that the road to forgiveness often includes forgiving ourselves as well.

READ MORE: Luke 23:34—A Closer Look at Forgiveness

Young woman doing her Easter tradition of cooking for her elderly neighbor

5. Do a yearly act of kindness

This is a time to remember how blessed we are. This Easter, start the tradition of being a blessing for someone else. Whether you do it for a family member, friend, acquaintance, coworker, neighbor, or a stranger, doing one act of kindness every Easter can lift your spirits and remind you what this season is all about. Here are a few tips for good deeds to do. Do them on your own, with your partner, or together as a family.

  • Take a meal to someone alone on Easter
  • Volunteer your time on Easter weekend
  • Organize a neighborhood Easter egg hunt
  • Donate to an animal shelter

READ MORE: 10 Acts of Kindness to Do for Easter

10 Blessings of Having a Pet Later in Life

Are you thinking about getting a pet but hesitating because you’re of a certain age? Consider this: Having an animal companion can be just as rewarding when you’re over 65 as it was when you were younger. Here’s why:

1. Staying Active

Exercising a dog can help you to get the exercise you need too. Be mindful of your physical condition: The right dog with the right training could be the perfect partner for strolling around the block, hiking in the woods or whatever activity you enjoy. Likewise, a playful cat may inspire you to stretch and move, all while having fun.

2. Improving Your Health

Did you know that pets are good for your heart? Studies show that petting a cat or dog can actually lower your blood pressure. Spending time with your pet can also increase your oxytocin, the “feel-good” hormone.

3. Finding Companionship

Public health experts are concerned about the loneliness epidemic in the United States, particularly among seniors. Live alone? Having a pet in the home means there is always someone there to greet you at the door and sit by your side.

4. Discovering Purpose

An empty nest or retirement can leave you feeling restless, even lost. Pets depend on you to take care of them, filling some of those voids. The level of care ranges from a dog, which requires significant time and energy, to fish, which are still engaging but require less attention.

5. Feeling Joy

A dog chasing a ball, a cat batting at your shoelaces or a guinea pig squeaking for a treat are all good for a laugh. Watching pets enjoy themselves can warm your heart. Consider the fun and games involved before choosing your companion.

6. Filling Your Schedule

Earlier in life, work and family kept you busy with no time to clean a litter box or walk a dog. Now, if your schedule is less demanding, a pet may fit in perfectly. Think about what kind of animal best suits your needs and interests. A toy poodle? A parakeet? A gecko?

7. Learning Something New

Keeping a pet, especially an uncommon one, is a way to expand your knowledge. Go beyond simply learning what your pet needs to stay healthy and happy. Research its origins. Try your hand at training—that way, you are both learning!

8. Relaxing

Sure, not all pets are relaxing all of the time. But have you ever wondered why many doctors’ waiting rooms contain aquariums? They’re calming—the serene water, the fish swimming back and forth, even the sound of the bubbles in the tank. If you like the idea of keeping an aquarium, talk to someone at your local pet shop to discern the type of fish and best setup for you.

9. Helping Another Senior

A senior pet, that is. Rescuing an animal is a wonderful way to provide a homeless pet with a family, but senior cats and dogs are often overlooked. Give a home to one of these less-adoptable pets, and you will both be rewarded.

10. Becoming More Social

If you feel awkward or anxious in social settings, a beloved pet is an easy conversation starter. People may even approach you while you’re walking your dog (“He’s beautiful. What breed is he?”). Before you know it, you’ve made a new friend.

Whether it’s a rabbit, turtle or basset hound, there are benefits to having a pet at any stage of life. Do your research, talk to family and friends and find the right animal for you and your household. Then enjoy all the relationship has to offer!

For inspiring animal-themed devotions, subscribe to All God’s Creatures magazine.

10 Animal Books that Changed My Life

As a kid, my favorite books were always about animals. Well, not a lot’s changed now that I’m grown.

I still love to read an inspiring tale of a beloved pet or one of God’s amazing wild creatures. As an author of books about the human-animal bond, animals are also my favorite topic to write about!

Today is National Education Association’s “Read Across America,” a day set aside to encourage a love of books and reading. In honor of this day, here are some classic and other much-loved books that celebrate the human-animal bond, and have made a giant impact on my life.

Classics
1)  Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White
I must have read this book a hundred times, and each time it retained the charm and magic that it held upon the first reading. I admire Fern’s maternal nature and loving attempts to protect her animal friends.

2)  All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot (and the rest of the series)
Beautifully-told tales of an English veterinarian and how he cared, with great love and compassion, for the farm animals and pets of the colorful people of Yorkshire.

3)  Born Free by Joy Adamson
I loved the bond between the author and the lioness Elsa so much, that when asked what I wanted to be when I grew up, I always responded, “Joy Adamson.”

Contemporary Adult
4)  The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein
Though many sad themes run through the book, the caring and sensitive observations of Enzo the dog steal my heart.

5)  You Had Me at Woof by Julie Klam
Not only does the author share her love of dogs, but she humorously recounts the trials and joys of fostering dogs.

6)  Homer’s Odyssey by Gwen Cooper
This book reveals a deep and honest relationship between a blind cat and his guardian.

7)  Through a Dog’s Eyes by Jennifer Arnold
When I read this book, it definitely enhanced my understanding of what my dogs wants and needs. We can apply this philosophy of understanding and respect to all animals.

Children’s
8)  Curious George by H.A. Rey
What is it about the Man with the Yellow Hat’s relationship with the curious little monkey? He is a guardian and friend who always trusts George to be good and is always there to get him out of trouble. I read these books to my children, and now I’m reading them to my granddaughter.

9)  The Incredible Journey by Sheila Burnford
To think of pets that loved their family so much, they endured a long and perilous journey to return home warms my heart. Based on a true story, too.

10) The Tenth Good Thing about Barney by Judith Viorst
This sweet book about pet loss helped me and my children deal with the loss of our beloved family pet and continues to be one I send to friends when they lose a pet.

There are so many wonderful and worthy books about animals and the humans who love them. What are some of your favorite animal books?

For Aaron Judge, the A.L.’s New Home Run King, Faith and Family Come First

Imagine the mythical lumberjack Paul Bunyan standing before you, but instead of a woodsman’s ax resting on his shoulder, he carries a baseball bat and displays a warm smile. That’ll give you a good picture of New York Yankees rookie sensation Aaron Judge, who, at 6’7” and 280 pounds, is one of the biggest men ever to play professional baseball.

Judge now holds the new American League record for home runs in a single season after slamming his 62nd long ball of the year on October 4, 2022, off Texas Rangers starter Jesus Tinoco. That homer broke Roger Maris’ mark of 61 homers, set in 1961. Maris broke Babe Ruth‘s longstanding record of 60 home runs, set in 1927. And now 61 years later, Judge rules the A.L. homer roost.

After the game, Judge said. “Getting a chance to do this, with the team we’ve got, the guys surrounding me, the constant support from my family whose been with me through this whole thing … it’s been a great honor.”

Judge’s prolific display of power in 2022 was far from an anomaly. He hit more home runs in his first season than any rookie slugger in history and led the New York Yankees into the playoffs, where they fell just one win short of representing the American League in the 2017 World Series. For his heroics, Judge was named the A.L. Rookie of the Year in a unanimous vote by the Baseball Writers of America, the first Yankees player so recognized since Derek Jeter won that award in 1996.

In addition to setting the new American League homer record and his 2017 Rookie of the Year award, Judge has amassed a long list of other accomplishments in his young career. He’s a four-time All-Star and won the 2017 Home Run Derby. He’s also been named a Silver Slugger twice and won the Fielding Bible Award, which rewards solid defensive play, in 2021.

Judge is a superstar in a city that loves its sports heroes but also tempts them with an abundance of the kind of distractions that can derail a promising career. He relies on faith and family to keep his feet firmly on the ground.

Born and raised in Linden, California, Judge was adopted as a newborn. When he was 10 years old, his folks, Patty and Wayne Judge, both teachers, shared with him that they were not his birth parents, something he had already begun to suspect. “I knew I didn’t look like them,” Judge told NorthJersey.com columnist Bob Klapisch. “I finally said, ‘OK, what’s going on?’ and that’s when they told me. I was fine with that, they were the only parents I ever knew. It actually wasn’t a big deal.”

Judge remains very close to his parents and calls them every day. He’s also known for his efforts to commit to memory the names of every reporter he encounters, both at home and during road trips.

Judge also avoids the nightlife that has been the downfall of many a New York athlete, and while he does, like so many athletes today, have a Twitter account, it’s strictly G-rated. The intro blurb reads, “Christian. Faith, Family, then Baseball. If what you did yesterday still seems big today, then you haven’t done anything today!,” and the banner image at the top of the page quotes 2 Corinthians 5:7—”For we walk by faith, not by sight.”

In 2017,  Joe Girardi, then the Yankees manager, discussed what makes the superstar right fielder special. “He’s got a smile all the time,” Girardi said. “He loves to play the game. You always think that he’s going to do the right thing on the field and off the field when you look at him. He’s got a presence about him.”

Faith, family, then baseball. That’s a recipe for success. Record-setting success.

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Forgiving Her Father

Strained. That was really the kindest way to describe my relationship with my father. My parents got divorced when I was six. After that, contact with Dad was sporadic. Not because of Mom, who understood that I needed him in my life. It was because of Dad.

He would miss scheduled visitations, go weeks sometimes without returning my calls. Mom tried to make excuses for him, but she couldn’t answer the questions that tore at my heart. Wasn’t I important to my own father? Didn’t he love me?

I saw how my friends were with their dads, and I yearned for that kind of closeness. I wanted a father I could rely on. Someone who wouldn’t forget my birthday or miss my dance recital and then claim he’d lost his ticket.

He did make it to my high school graduation, though. He wore his best summer suit and nice cologne, and it felt so good to have him throw his arm around me. I prayed that that would be a turning point for us. It wasn’t.

If anything, we drifted even further apart. Practically nonexistent would be the most accurate way to describe our relationship for most of the last 15 years. I had stayed close to my grandma, his mom, and I would see him at her house for a few hours each Christmas.

He’d sit on the couch sipping Scotch and we’d carry on an awkward conversation, like a couple of strangers instead of father and daughter. I tried to close my heart and pretend it didn’t matter. I was an adult; I had my own life. But pretending didn’t work. It still hurt.

Then one Christmas Dad made an unexpected—and uncharacteristic—offer. “Keep the books for me at the shopping center one day a week, and I’ll pay your mortgage,” he said, looking not at me but at the ice cubes he was swirling around in his glass. “At least you’ll keep a roof over your head.”

He’d bought a small strip mall in Tulsa, sold his house and taken up residence in one of the vacant storefronts. Money had been tight for me since I started my own business.

I could use the income, but the last thing I wanted was to drive an hour and a half each way from my home to his place and risk being hurt again. Still, what if this was the opening I’d hoped for all these years? I told him I’d do it.

“You can start Monday,” Dad said. “Come real early.” He wanted me there the moment he awakened.

That first Monday I discovered why. It was the only time he was sober. He steadily consumed alcohol and painkillers all morning, and by noon his eyes were glazed over.

How could I not have known?

I drove home that afternoon not sure whether I was more angry at him or at myself. We had never spent much time together, but now everything made sense—the missed visits, the forgotten phone calls. Lord, why are you having me work with Dad? I can’t help him.

But I couldn’t stop thinking about him either. Dad was on my mind when I fell asleep that night and when I got up the next day. Perhaps he couldn’t show me love because of his addiction, but what was my excuse? At least I could let him know I cared about him and was grateful that he’d hired me.

I scrolled through the card-making program I had on my computer. I chose a simple drawing of a star with the message “You’re a star.” I printed out the card, folded it and wrote a few lines thanking him for the opportunity to work with him.

Digging through my desk for an envelope, I came across a box of silver stars—like the ones teachers use. Dad might get a kick out of them, I thought. I shook some inside the envelope and put the card in the mailbox.

He didn’t mention it the following Monday. “Did you get my card?” I finally asked.

“Mmm-hmm,” he muttered, without even glancing my way. His tone sounded disapproving.

He’ll never change. I pushed my hurt down and went back to his files.

Mondays with Dad weren’t ever easy. He was moody and argumentative and sometimes downright irrational. One day as I was leaving, he stopped me at the door.

“I’ve always done right by you, girl,” he said, waving the check for my mortgage. The check I’d earned by keeping his books, I wanted to remind him.

Irritation must have shown on my face because Dad’s neck reddened and his eyes narrowed. “I paid child support and put you through college,” he said. “I even bought you a camera for that photography class you took.”

I should have kept my voice calm, but a lifetime of hurt rose up and boiled over. “That was twenty years ago!” I snapped. “Why are you bringing up the past?”

Dad’s shoulders slumped. “Because it was the best I could do.”

He had always taken great pride in keeping his financial obligations to me. Was it easier for him to give material things than the love I craved? Or maybe giving money was the way he showed love. My heart softened and I stepped toward Dad to hug him. But he turned away.

“See you next Monday,” he said, hoisting his bottle of Scotch. “Come early.”

I drove home enveloped by sadness—not only for myself but also for my dad. Instead of seeing him through the eyes of a wounded child, I had a new, adult perspective.

My 62-year-old father was an alcoholic and an addict, and likely had been most of my life. That colored everything he did and said. Maybe it wasn’t just the best he could do—maybe it was all he could do.

From then on I prayed for Dad every morning. Help him, Lord, I asked. Let him know that I love him. That I forgive him. I tried talking to him about his addiction, but it sent him flying into a rage.

So I kept it simple. Every week I mailed him a lighthearted computer-generated card or a Polaroid of my dog with a silly saying written on it. Sometimes I brought along treats I’d baked for him. I had my grandma’s recipe box and she’d marked his favorites, like black walnut cookies and coconut cake.

Dad never mentioned any of it, but the more I prayed and did loving things for him, the less I felt the hurt of the past.

For more than a year i spent Monday mornings in Tulsa with Dad. Come June I was looking forward to Father’s Day. I sent him a special card and called several times that Sunday to wish him a happy Father’s Day.

I couldn’t get him on his landline or his cell phone. I figured he’d been drinking and couldn’t pick up.

My phone rang that night. Was it Dad returning my call? No, it was the Tulsa fire marshal. He told me the roof of the shopping center had caught fire in the early hours that morning. The fire had spread fast and Dad was dead of smoke inhalation.

Very little was salvageable, the fire marshal said, but someone needed to walk through the site the next day and inventory Dad’s belongings for the insurance company. I was his nearest relative.

Monday afternoon I met the fire marshal outside Dad’s place. The smell was overpowering, charred lumber mixed with bitter tar from the roof. Ashes floated on the breeze. “We need to wait for the insurance adjuster,” the fire marshal said.

“I didn’t get to wish him a happy Father’s Day,” I murmured. It seemed immeasurably sad that just when I thought I’d rediscovered my father, I lost him.

The insurance agent arrived. “I’m sorry for your loss,” he said. He handed me a paper mask. I pulled it over my nose and mouth and followed him into the burned-out building.

Cautiously we made our way through the charred rubble. Dad’s desk had been incinerated. All that was left of the couch was the steel frame and wire coils. The dining table was burned down to its legs. Shards of broken dishes and glass littered the counters.

We got to the back room, Dad’s bedroom. His dresser, the furthest away from where the fire started, stood unmarred. “Check the drawers and I’ll take a peek in the closet,” the insurance adjuster said.

I pulled open the first drawer and found a stack of white undershirts. I gathered up a handful and buried my face in the soft fabric. It didn’t seem possible, but the scent of Dad’s cologne surrounded me.

The bottom drawer stuck. I used both hands and heaved hard. The drawer flew open. A smattering of silver stars spilled out. The ones I’d put in that first card I’d made for him on my computer. The drawer was stuffed with cards and photos.

One by one I lifted them out. Dad had never said a word, but he’d saved every single thing I’d sent him the past year and a half.

I dug deeper in the drawer. There was a bunch of old papers. I couldn’t believe it. Letters I’d written to him from college. He’d saved them. My school pictures too. And Father’s Day cards dating all the way back to when I was six.

I sank to my knees, tears rolling down my cheeks. Tears of gratitude for these past months we’d had together.

I hadn’t been spending Mondays with Dad to get me through a rough patch or to help him or change him. I’d been given this time to change me, to heal my hurt, to forgive the past and open my heart to my father’s love.

I scooped up the silver stars and let them slide through my fingers. I watched them drift through the air and come to rest in my lap.

“Happy Father’s Day, Daddy,” I whispered.

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Forgiveness Might Still Be Possible in the Digital Age, But How Do We Forget?

Evidently, Sarah Palin, or at least her minions, have been trying to take down the now-notorious map of 20 congressional districts targeting representatives to challenge in the 2010 elections.

Call them crosshairs, call them surveyors’ marks, but as Josh Bernoff at Adage.com has pointed out, you can’t take something off the Net once it’s been put up there. In fact, you can even draw more attention to it by your efforts (there’s evidently something called the Streisand effect, recalling Barbra Streisand’s lawyer’s efforts to remove pictures of her house on the web).

How do we forgive and forget in this age when nothing can truly be forgotten? It’s all out there floating around in cyberspace.

I’ve typed stuff in a rage to one or two correspondents that I really hope never turns up again. I’d like to think it sinks into oblivion, weighted down by the ages, but it’s just as alive as when I typed it. Not long ago, I really hurt a friend with a hasty message I left on his phone. He called back and left me a message revealing his anger. Luckily, I was able to catch him on the phone and apologize. “Please forgive me,” I said. “Think nothing more of it,” he said. “It never happened.” But what if the whole thing were in an e-mail exchange, waiting to be rediscovered, like a wound begging to be picked? You can push “delete” and then delete it from your deleted mail and you know it’ll still be there.

Forgiveness is a powerful force, essential to our mental health. Laura Hillenbrand’s best-selling book Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption tells about how Louie Zamperini, brutally tortured in a Japanese prison camp, found release when he finally forgave his torturer, who surely doesn’t sound like he deserved it. But then, isn’t that the whole point? To really forgive you’ve got to forgive the unforgivable.

We depend on time to heal all wounds. Forgetting is a helpful partner when you need to forgive. I remember my wife writing an article about adult siblings who had reunited after long periods of separation. “You can write about my dad and my uncle,” I suggested. They had a falling out when I was a kid and didn’t speak for years, but by their 70s they were the closest of brothers. She tentatively approached my dad on the idea. He would do anything to help my wife, but he wasn’t going to help her here. To bring up the feud again was to bring up something too painful. Better to leave things alone. Forgiveness had happened with the aid of forgetting. (Even as I reveal the thinnest outlines of the story I fear I might hurt my uncle or my cousins or any of my loved ones.)

Forgiveness is part of our spiritual well being, but when I’ve talked to people who have forgiven powerful wrongs, they’ve pointed out that it’s not always good to ask for someone’s forgiveness. It can bring up the unforgettable. Better to act in a forgiving way. Forgetting is divine.

My favorite example of divine forgetfulness comes from a surely apocryphal story of a simple Philippine peasant who claimed that he had spoken to Jesus. He was taken to the local bishop, his claims tested, only to insist on the truth of his testimony. “All right,” said the bishop, “next time you talk to Jesus, ask him to tell you what sins I’ve confessed.” The peasant agreed. Soon he returned to the bishop and offered only one answer, “He forgets.”

Now in telling this, I’m sure I’ve gotten some detail wrong or made a mistake in attribution, so please forgive me. I’m afraid that none of what I’ve written here can be forgotten.