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The Biker and the Hiker

Dottie Lloyd read about the walker one warm summer morning at breakfast. “Miles to Go,” the story in the newspaper was headlined. A man named Ray Goodman was on an epic walk across the United States. He’d already walked 1,600 miles, but had thousands of miles ahead of him.

That sparked Dottie’s interest. She and her husband, Stan, also loved traveling the country, although they did it riding their big Harleys, not on foot.

The paper said that Ray would be passing that day along Highway 412, the main drag in Paragould, Dottie’s small northeastern Arkansas town. Maybe I’ll see him, thought Dottie. Strangers stuck out in Paragould. She read on.

The story said Ray had worked as a repo man for an attorney in Philadelphia. When people couldn’t pay their debts, it was Ray’s job to repossess their house, car, savings, whatever they had that he could grab.

The job paid well, and Ray owned a house and a boat. But he’d been consumed by guilt for making his living off other people’s misfortune. “I’ll never get over it,” he told the Paragould Daily Press.

One day Ray decided he’d had enough. He quit his job, sold his house and boat, donated his money to charity and set off walking. It was no ordinary walk. In a sense, it was a walk of penance. After all, Jesus bids us to help the poor more than anything else in the New Testament.

Ray had no money for food. He couldn’t pay for lodging. Nevertheless, he vowed never to ask anyone for help, only taking what was freely offered to him. In a backpack he carried clothes, toiletries and a stack of brochures for the Sierra Club, America’s largest grassroots environmental organization.

With the blessing of the club’s directors, Ray had dedicated his hike to raising awareness about the environment and recruiting new Sierra Club members.

On his itinerary were numerous national parks. Ray had always loved the outdoors. The walk was his chance to give back. And to rely on other people’s generosity after a lifetime of taking things away.

Wow, thought Dottie. Ray Goodman sounded like one inspiring person. She almost hoped she would run into him that day.

That afternoon Dottie was in a rush, pulling out of the Walmart parking lot onto Highway 412 on her way home to fix dinner. She saw a lone man, strolling along the sidewalk, with a backpack and a pair of trekking poles. He was wearing a red shirt, blue shorts and a yellow baseball cap.

His tanned face was long and thin, framed by a neatly trimmed beard. He walked briskly and resolutely, as if walking was more natural to him than standing still.

Dottie was so startled she almost didn’t say anything. At the last minute she slowed, rolled down her window and said, “Hey, you’re that guy from the paper.”

Ray smiled. “That’s right,” he said.

She flashed a thumbs-up. “Good luck with your journey!”

“Thanks!” Ray replied.

Then Dottie pulled out into traffic again and lost sight of Ray in her rearview mirror.

Almost instantly she felt bad. Dumb. She remembered how Ray had forbidden himself to ask for help. Why hadn’t she offered to buy him some food? Let him camp in the backyard? Something, anything. How could she have forgotten?

She did a U-turn and drove back along the highway. By then Ray was gone. She checked a few side streets, then made her way to an RV campground where the newspaper said Ray was staying. No sign of him.

Dottie drove home feeling terrible. She hadn’t just let Ray down. She’d let God down. We’re supposed to welcome strangers and care for others! Dottie thought, remonstrating with herself.

She’d read that article about Ray and then run into him—if that wasn’t a call from the Lord, she didn’t know what was. But Dottie hadn’t even offered Ray something from her grocery bags. She’d been too startled, too much in a rush to get home. Still, it wasn’t like her to be so thoughtless.

The next few days she looked for Ray but never saw him. She showed the newspaper story to Stan. For a while she and her husband followed Ray’s occasional updates to his Facebook page. But life went on and Dottie’s remorse faded.

Three months later, Dottie and Stan set out on a 10-day, 3,000-mile motorcycle tour. With another couple, they planned to ride up to the Dakotas, then down through Wyoming and Colorado. It was September, the perfect time of year for a road trip.

At the halfway point of their odyssey, the two couples pulled up to the Mount Rushmore visitors’ center. They parked their bikes and went inside. That’s when Dottie saw him. A familiar figure.

His back was to her but Dottie recognized the same red shirt, blue shorts, backpack and yellow baseball cap. Trekking poles at the ready. Ray Goodman.

Dottie marched right up to him and said, “Hey, you’re the guy walking across the United States!”

Ray looked a little startled. “That’s right,” he said. “How did you know?”

“I’ve seen you before, in Paragould, Arkansas,” said Dottie. “You should have lunch with my friends and me. On us. I won’t let you tell me no.”

Ray smiled, a flicker of relief in his eyes. He looked much thinner than he had been when she last saw him.

“You’re sure it’s all right?” he asked. “I mean, I haven’t showered in days—”

Dottie cut him off with a laugh. “Ray, we’re bikers, for crying out loud!” she said, laughing. “We don’t mind.”

Pretty soon, Dottie, Stan, their friends and Ray were seated in a cafeteria with big plate-glass windows looking out toward the famous mountain. The great presidents seemed to look down in approval.

Everyone had pot roast, glazed carrots, roasted potatoes, crusty rolls, and cake for dessert. “I’m glad we ran into you,” said Dottie. “I still feel terrible I didn’t offer you anything in Paragould.”

Ray cocked his head. “Don’t feel bad,” he said. “I had tons of help in Paragould. What an incredibly generous town!”

They all talked about their travels and about the places Ray was headed next. Ray finished the last bites of his dessert, and Dottie offered him her leftovers. He ate them without hesitation. Finally, it was time to go.

“I can’t thank you enough for this meal,” Ray said. “Out here in the Dakotas, I’ve had long stretches where I don’t see a soul. This is the best meal I’ve had in days.” Dottie got the feeling it was the only real meal he’d had in days.

Dottie and the others watched him go. It was only as Ray’s lean, upright form faded from sight that Dottie realized what had just happened. She knew she’d been called to help, but there was a reason she’d let Ray pass by in Paragould.

He didn’t need her help then. He needed her help later, at the foot of Mount Rushmore, many miles further up the road than Dottie could have seen.

Download your FREE ebook, Mysterious Ways: 9 Inspiring Stories that Show Evidence of God’s Love and God’s Grace.

The Audacity of Faith

Hardships affect everyone at some time or another. As a pastor, I have seen people overcome addiction, depression, restore broken relationships and much more. Through it all, I have observed how God empowers and comforts people in their time of need. There is no mountain too high or valley too low for God. We can always turn to our faith for spiritual power and emotional strength.

Faith is the force that keeps us in the game when the odds are against us. When my colleague’s mother, Pat, was 65 years old, she was diagnosed with bone cancer and was given six months to live. Although she was devastated by this news, she did not let it defeat her; she refused to give up. Pat faced her battle against cancer with faith and hope—and won. Ten years later, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Once again, believing in the power of prayer, she experienced God’s healing power. Pat overcame the odds and lived to be 96.

Having faith doesn’t mean we will get all of the things we pray for or that our situation will change overnight. However, it provides us with the courage to bear challenges, endure the unexpected and embrace change. When our human strength is depleted, faith connects us to the source of power. English Anglo-Catholic writer, Evelyn Underhill, wrote, “God’s power is brought into action just where our power fails.”

No matter what your situation is, if you embrace your faith, things you can’t imagine can and will happen. Miracles happens when you least expect it; a prayer is answered; you are offered a new job and so forth.

There are no quick fixes to life’s problems and personal battles. But with faith we can get through anything. The book of Hebrews states, “faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” Faith empowers us to face whatever life brings our way. And if you want to deepen your faith, click here to read Empowered by Faith. How has your faith empowered you? Please share with us.

Lord, thank you for the power and gift of faith.

The Art of Wonder (or the Wonder of Art)

Have you ever come across a painting or work of art that just spoke to you? Or moved you in some spiritual, almost mystical way?

Back in high school, I came across such a painting. It was the summer before my senior year and I was taking painting classes at Ann Kim’s art studio in New York.

Mrs. Kim, as I still call her today, is a Biblical artist and her stunning work has traveled the world. She taught classes during the regular school year, but I was preparing an art portfolio to submit with my college applications–hence the “summer school.”

It never really felt like school, though. I loved every minute of those Saturdays at Mrs. Kim’s. The smell of oil paint that greeted me every time I creaked open the studio door.

The classical music playing in the background. The gentletap-tap of the brush hitting the canvas. And Mrs. Kim’s Yoda-like advice on everything from paint hues to career goals. The whole experience was kind of magical.

When I needed a break, I’d wander around the studio and study Mrs. Kim’s paintings that covered the bright walls. Self-portraits. Still lifes of summer flowers. And, of course, the biblical art she was known for, including a painting for every book of the Bible. Like faith come to life.

My favorite painting hung at the very back of the studio–Jesus on the cross, crying out to his father. I could stare at it for hours. Even the brush strokes conveyed so much emotion. I didn’t know a painting could do that–so perfectly capture the depth of pain and suffering.

It was chilling and beautiful all at the same time. A very visible reminder of God’s sacrifice on the cross. Something I don’t think I truly understood until I saw it hanging right before me on canvas. It was almost otherworldly.

One of the many, many wondrous things about God is that he speaks to each of us in an infinite number of ways, on a very personal level. So it’s no surprise that we all connect to him differently.

For some, it’s singing songs of praise. Or listening to a powerful sermon. Or studying the great theologians of the past. For me, I feel especially linked to God when lost in art.

I finished my portfolio that summer, though (spoiler alert!) I never went on to study art in college. Still, I’ll always have a special place in my heart for Mrs. Kim’s art. And a painting that brought me closer to God.

What about you? Which work of art opened your eyes up to God’s wonder? Share your favorites below.

The Amazing Return of an Angel Pin

I don’t write about angels too often (I leave that to my Angels on Earth colleagues!). But recently something angelic happened that I just have to share.

Two weeks ago, my sisters and I went to my parents’ house for Father’s Day weekend. I was feeling under the weather. I had just started a new treatment for my multiple sclerosis. It’s a really great medication, but the first month on it has been kind of rough. Especially when you throw in the crazy allergy season we’ve been having here in New York.

Anyway, that Saturday, my mom and aunts had organized a garage sale at our church. My dad, sister and I went to check it out. I’m a big jewelry person, so I walked straight up to the “jewelry table” where there was an assortment of necklaces and jewelry boxes. Nothing caught my eye. So I browsed the other tables and then headed back to find my mom. I passed by the jewelry table again and looked down once more. That’s when I saw it. A tiny gold pin at the edge of the table.

I picked it up. It was a guardian angel in a circle of diamonds. Where in the world had it come from? I was pretty sure it wasn’t there when I’d first stopped at the table. It was like it had just appeared out of nowhere for me to find!

That experience would’ve been amazing enough on its own. Except that that’s not the first time something like that has happened to me. Back in 8th grade, I was about to take a science test and was completely freaking out. I was a good student, but science wasn’t my forte. In the midst of my panicking, though, I heard it. A light thud. Something had fallen onto my desk. I glanced down and saw a gold pin on my test paper. A guardian angel.

I was floored. It was so clearly a sign from God. That He was with me, through thick and thin.

Then and now. To find another pin, some 20 years later, when I was in need of a pick-me-up? Just incredible.

What about you? Have you ever gotten a sign from God? Share your story below!

The Amazing Art of Holocaust Survivor Esther Krinitz

When I grew up in Denmark, my family was bound together by love for one another and our intense interest in music. For 35 years my father was a violinist in the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and he wanted me to take up the violin, too. My mother, however, loved the piano. And that did it!

In the 1920s and ‘30s I became immensely busy on the stage, radio and in the movies. But in the 1930s something else was happening in Europe. We in Denmark despised the Nazis, and it was natural for me to make them the butt of much of my satirical humor. That they were not in love with me either was obvious from the letters and threatening phone calls I received.

My father, who at my birth in 1909 was 62 years old, had died in 1932. By the spring of 1940, just as I had left for Sweden to star in a musical revue, Mother grew gravely ill. Then, on April 9th, the Germans swept into Denmark. In my absence Mother was immediately brought to a private hospital and admitted under an assumed name to save her from being held hostage in retaliation for my disappearance, because I had been placed on the most-wanted list by the Nazis.

Known as I was by every Dane, I nevertheless managed to slip back into Denmark undetected. Fully aware of the danger involved, I had to see my mother, who had not been told of the Nazi invasion. Pale and weak, she held out her arms to greet me and drew me close. “You see,” she whispered, “I’m getting better, and soon …” Her strength had gone. At that moment, desperate to find a way to cheer her, I told her that I had just received an incredible offer from Hollywood, and that—as soon as she was well enough—together we would go to America. It was a tremendous lie. At that time I had not the slightest notion of going to America. But I would have done or said anything just to see her smite again. She did … and whispered barely audibly, “…don’t let it go to your head…”

We talked a little until it was time to leave. I leaned down and kissed her. “Good-bye, Mother; and as the sound of the last word echoed in my ears, I knew that I should never see her again.

That evening I returned across the Sound to Sweden. How was it possible to perform those nights in a musical comedy revue? A week later the cablegram came: Mother had died in her sleep. At 10 o’clock on Friday morning there would be a service for her.

I wanted desperately to get back, but it was impossible. The dangers were now too hazardous to overcome, and no longer could I offer comfort to my mother. In my hotel room in Stockholm I read the cable again—“Service at 10 o’clock,” it said. What sort of service would there be? As a student, I’d earned extra money playing the organ at many funeral services. The ritual I knew by heart.

On the day of the funeral, at 9:30 in the morning, I climbed the steps leading to a cemetery in a Stockholm suburb. I knocked on the door of the caretaker’s office. Yes, he understood what I wanted to do, and led me to a small stone chapel, opened the door, walked away, and left me alone.

For a moment I stood in the aisle of the little church. A soft light filtered down from the stained-glass windows. Then I went to the organ and sat down. I looked at my watch. It was almost 10 o’clock.

Five hundred miles south in Copenhagen, the people who knew and loved my mother were filing into the sanctuary where her body rested. I began by playing a simple lullaby that Mother had sung to me. My hands dropped to my lap. After a few moments had passed I could almost hear the voice of someone in that distant chapel speaking about my mother’s dedication to her family and friends, and her devotion to decency and to dignity. I played again, improvising upon some music we had shared.

Strange, I thought, that the walls of the little chapel could withstand the surge of my emotions.

There I was, far from home in another country, forbidden to be at my mother’s side even during the last hours of her life.

But she was now freed from the horrors of war and the Holocaust—and so was I. For her death made it possible for me to escape the tragic fate which I would have been dealt by the enemy.

That’s the way my mother would have chosen it. I know …

And, by miraculous circumstances, I was able to reach America, where soon after I went to Hollywood and was virtually absolved from my great lie.

For more inspiring stories, subscribe to Guideposts magazine.

Thankful for God’s Perfect Timing

My laptop ended up in the computer hospital this week. It’s never good when you tell your computer doctor what’s going on and he says, “I’ve never heard that before.”

It sounds like such a simple thing to be without your computer for several days, but for someone who uses it for the family business and writes full-time, it’s major.

I had to get creative to meet my obligations. My blog for Guideposts was due a few hours after my computer went haywire. As panic set in, I realized I could type the story in an email on my iPad mini. It was a slow process on the tiny keyboard, but it got the job done.

I couldn’t open files, so I had to ask friends to cut and paste what I needed for my parenting blog into an email. Then I could edit the posts and send them on to my assistant.

Read More: 3 Tips to Build a Powerful Faith by Elizabeth Peale Allen

I needed to send time-sensitive files to some folks—but since I couldn’t access anything, I didn’t have a way to send what they needed. But then God reminded me that I could find them in previous emails I’d sent and I could just forward them through my cell phone.

It wasn’t fun, but it worked. And throughout the days that this computer addict was missing her laptop, I kept whispering, “God, thank You SO much that this didn’t happen three days ago.”

Three days before, I’d been doing final touches on the two manuscripts that were due to my publisher. I got them in by deadline . . . right before my computer went crazy on me. His timing was perfect! And that made me think about how often He’s an on-time God. Even when it doesn’t seem like it to us at the time.

It’s hard to wait during a financial crisis, during health issues that the doctors can’t solve or when worried about a prodigal child. And sometimes, it can even seem like God’s provision is late. But it’s not.

Read More: The Confidence to Trust in God by Norman Vincent Peale

Here are some things I’ve learned from those times:

  • They taught me to trust Him more.
  • They set me up for the next crisis—by reminding me that He is a God with a proven track record of supplying our needs.
  • They taught me things that have enabled me to comfort others.
  • And they provided proof that God’s promises are true.

Are you in wait mode today? You can count on His perfect timing. Tried and proven.

Thailand Cave Rescue: How the Boys Stayed Calm

If you have ever wondered whether meditation can help you cope with tough times in your life, look no further than the 12 Thai boys who survived their two-week ordeal trapped with their soccer coach in a flooded cave.

According to news reports, the boys’ coach, 25-year-old Ekapol Chanthawong used guided meditations to help the 11- to 16-year-old boys stay calm through moments when excessive anxiety could have cost them their lives. Chanthawong had training as a novice monk in the Buddhist tradition, in which meditation is a hallmark practice. According to the Associated Press, Chanthawong could meditate for up to an hour.

For all its benefits, meditation is not a complicated practice, and although there is a long history of meditation in the Christian tradition, too, it’s not associated with a particular religion. It can simply involve sitting quietly and breathing deeply and evenly. You can visualize a peaceful place, or do a “body scan” to check in with each part of your body and release any tension you discover there.

Scientific research supports the idea that meditation can affect mental functions, including calming anxiety and reducing the perception of physical pain. Leah Weiss, a meditation expert and professor at Stanford University, told CNBC that meditation works by calming a number of physical and mental responses, including slowing the heart rate, decreasing levels of “stress hormones” like cortisol, and regulating how the body uses oxygen and releases carbon dioxide.

Perhaps most importantly for the tween and teen boys, Weiss said, meditation allows for clear thinking as it calms the “fight-or-flight” reaction that can cause panic at times of heightened stress. “Cognitive resources that would otherwise be hijacked by the threat can be accessed once again, meaning that problem-solving capacities increase,” Weiss said.

A solid body of scientific research backs up the claim that meditation benefits both physical and emotional health. One 2012 study found that meditators were less bothered by startling sounds than people who were not meditating. A 2016 study found that people who practice meditation experience painful stimuli as less intense than those who do not meditate. Still other research points to meditation’s impact on focus and attention, body awareness and social connection.

All these skills are crucial to survival in an acute situation like the one faced by the Thai soccer team. As we continue to marvel at the bravery, intelligence and help that graced the team, let us also reflect on the ways in which one of the most basic functions of human existence—the ability to regulate our breathing—is, in itself, a miracle.

Tell Me What You Think of Mysterious Ways Magazine

Now that the Olympics are over (well, almost—congrats, Team U.S.A.), Curiosity has landed on Mars (congrats, JPL, especially the engineer with the Mohawk and the totally positive guy who started celebrating a second before everyone else, and the political conventions haven’t started yet (God save us), I can finally ask you: What did you think of the first issue of Mysterious Ways magazine?

I’ve been telling you about this exciting new publication that grew out of the famous column in Guideposts magazine and out of the popular Mysterious Ways newsletter and podcasts. So now the first issue is out the door and on its way (we celebrated only a little less jubilantly than the scientists in the JPL control room and the U.S. women’s soccer ream). And all joking aside, I think it’s one of the very best projects I have ever been involved with.

But what I really want to know is what you thought. Were you moved and inspired? Did you think about all the wonderful and unexpected ways a hidden hand touches your life? What were your favorite stories? What did you think of the design and graphic look? Will you order a subscription for yourself or a friend or family member?

Most of all, did Mysterious Ways put a shiver down your spine and a tear in your eye?

To order a free issue, click here then let me know what you think. We’re working on the second issue right now and you can certainly help us out by giving us your response. Please post your comments below. Thanks and have a great week. I hope something mysterious and wonderful comes your way…

Talking Miracles with Gabrielle Bernstein

Does the universe really send us mes­sages? Gabrielle Bernstein is the author of May Cause Miracles, The Universe Has Your Back and the recently released Judgment Detox. In 2005, after a years-long battle with drug and alcohol addiction, she called out to the universe for help and got a message back loud and clear. In the time since, Gabrielle has dedicated her life to the study of miracles. She recently talked to Mysterious Ways about her spiritual awakening and the signs she’s received along the way….

Have you always been a spiritual seeker?
My family is Jewish, and I was brought up very spiritual. I think I was always searching for God without realizing it. But I turned my back on faith in my twenties. I was running a PR company in New York City, just burning out in all directions. I started looking for God in all the wrong plac­es, looking outside myself for happiness. That led to drug and alcohol addiction, work addiction, love ad­diction. By the time I was 25, my life was a nightmare I couldn’t wake up from. I was depressed. My business was crumbling. I was partying every night until 5 a.m. and weighed less than 100 pounds. And then, on October 2, 2005, everything changed.

What happened?
I completely hit rock bottom. I came home from a night of heavy partying and sat in my bedroom, try­ing to come down from whatever drugs I was on. I took out my journal and wrote, “I need a miracle. God, universe, whoever is out there, help me.” I fell asleep. The first thing I heard when I woke up in the morning was, “Get clean and you will live a life beyond your wildest dreams.” I’d heard whispers of that guiding inner voice in my life before, telling me there had to be a better way. Never like this, though. I had no choice but to listen. That one miracle led me down a com­pletely new path. I entered a recovery program and promised myself I wouldn’t turn my back on the source of love that had saved me.

Does everyone hear their inner voice the way you did?
There’s a beauty in the bottom be­cause, when you hit it, there’s no way to go but up. All logical solutions and ways to anesthetize your pain are gone. You’re more open to a spir­itual awakening because nothing else is left. And you can hear your in­tuition loud and clear. But there are a lot of ways God communicates with us. Some people hear guidance through an audible sound. Or through people. Others get a feeling or an idea that comes in a dream. It doesn’t really matter how you hear God. The universe sends us messages, wheth­er we notice them or not. What’s im­portant is that you’re open to hearing God’s voice coming through.

How can you tell your inner voice from your ego?
Your inner voice is one of love and support. It’s free-flowing. There’s no agenda, no rush, no control. The voice of your ego, on the other hand, is controlling and can be a voice of attack, judgment and fear. Those are the things that can block your miracle mind-set.

What’s a miracle mind-set?
A miracle is a shift in perception, when we change our minds about the world we see. When you shift, say, from attack to forgiveness or from fear to love—those are miracu­lous moments. So when you’re aligned with God and listening to your intuition, you’re in a miracle mind-set. You’re forgiving, limitless, open, nonjudgmental, at peace.

Do you experience more miracles in that state?
Absolutely. Everyone has the ca­pacity to experience miracles. But control blocks our miracle mind-set in a major way because we think our will is the way and we start to rely on our own strength. You try to con­trol the outcome of a medical diag­nosis or your love life, and you forget to rely on a higher power. The more aligned you are with God’s nature and the more you surrender, the more serenity you’ll experience. And the more mystical experiences you’ll have because you’ve taken away the things that block your peace. And when you start to live in that peace, you’ll see more miracles and receive more signs.

How do you know if God is really sending you a sign?
It will feel like a gift. There will be no question where it came from. It often catches you by surprise. One of the signs I always seem to get from the universe is an owl. When my hus­band and I moved to a new house, our broker gave me a housewarming gift. He said he’d seen it and thought I’d like it. I unwrapped it and almost fell over. It was a ceramic bowl with an owl print! I’d never told my broker about my thing with owls. It was a lit­tle sign letting me know I was in the right home, on the right path. I knew that because it wasn’t planned or something I was trying to force.

What’s the biggest surprise you’ve received from the universe?
So many. But one incident sticks out. Three years ago, my husband and I were trying to conceive. It was a difficult year. I wasn’t feeling great. I was lacking in faith and trying to make things happen on my timeline. I decided to take a yearlong break from it all. In January of last year, we started trying again. I began to notice those same controlling behaviors in myself coming back. I stopped, stepped back and asked for a sign.

Later that day, I was look­ing out the window at home and saw five big wild turkeys. I was just in awe of them. They were so beautiful. I’d never seen them before. And there was this whole bunch of them. Two hours later, while I was meditat­ing, I felt my intuition telling me to Google wild turkeys. I got up, went to my desk and Googled, “What is the spiritual meaning of turkeys?” And the answer was fertility! I was just in awe. Here was this great, gor­geous reminder of the universe hav­ing my back.

How can you ask God for a sign?
We’re always in communication with the universe, and you’ll get signs if you ask. Listen for an answer. Ask the universe to be loud and clear so there’s no mistaking it. You can be specific about the sign you’d like to receive. Don’t force a message or outcome, though. It’s not a magic trick. We can sometimes get stuck in “I need my sign! I need my sign!” But not getting a sign is still a sign. We’re always being guided. Even when things are difficult and life doesn’t feel as if it’s flowing. That’s guidance too, saying, “It’s time to redirect.” The bigger goal is always to listen to your intuition. Trust that your inner wisdom and universal guidance are working through you.

Survival Mode

Swim to my voice. The words washed over me like the waves I was hopelessly fighting, salt water spraying my face. My legs were cramping from the exertion of staying afloat. But I kept moving. I had to.

I was stranded in the Gulf of Mexico. What would happen if I stopped fighting the terrible current? Would I be swept out further into the gulf, my body never even found?

I was miles from shore. It was dark. I scanned the horizon, looking for a sign that help was on the way. All I saw were the blinking red lights of a cell tower and the faint beam of a lighthouse, both miles farther than I could swim.

I bobbed up and down with the waves, kicking my legs and struggling to get a steady flow of air. I’m a nurse, so I’m no stranger to crisis situations. I’m used to do-or-die, life-or-death scenarios. It’s my job to keep a level head. But I’d never been the one in danger before. Not till now. Not like this.

I’d been adrift since sunset. It had been a wonderful day. I’d met my friend Rusty for dinner in Tampa. We had plans to go to a restaurant in town, but Rusty had an impulse. “Let’s take my boat out and watch the sunset from the water first.” It was a warm summer evening and the smooth, sparkling surface of Tampa Bay looked so peaceful, so tempting.

We left from the St. Petersburg marina and sailed toward the gulf under the Skyway Bridge and then stopped south of Fort De Soto Park, the last spit of land before it’s nothing but open water. We watched the clouds turn orange and pink. The faint scent of fish lingered in the air.

Our stomachs growled. The sky darkened. Time to head back to land.

“I’m going to cool off in the water first,” I said. I lowered myself halfway down the ladder on the side of the boat and let my legs dangle. All at once, a swell surged up and knocked me into the bay.

“Hey!” I yelled, waving at Rusty up above me. “I fell overboard! Throw me a line!”

Rusty tossed a rope over the side, but the current was surprisingly fast. It whisked me away from the boat. I swam as hard as I could. Then I heard a splash. I craned my neck to see…Rusty?

“What are you doing?” I yelled, my limbs already tiring from fighting the current. “You should stay with the boat!” Too late. We were both good swimmers—I’d been a certified diver for more than 20 years—but the tide was going out. Within seconds, the boat was little more than a tiny dot in the distance.

Clare, don’t panic, I thought. I’d learned that panic was the deadliest factor in any emergency. But how could I be calm now? My muscles ached, it was almost dark, we were rapidly being carried out into the gulf. And nobody knew where we were.

“We have to keep our eyes on the Egmont Key lighthouse,” Rusty shouted over the waves, pointing to a white light south of us. “Once we get past it, we need to swim toward the cell tower at Fort De Soto Park.”

I looked at the flickering lights in the distance, one white, one red, both seemingly as far away as the stars beginning to twinkle in the sky above. “I don’t know if I can make it,” I gasped.

“Clare, you have to,” Rusty said. “Don’t give up.”

I wanted to berate him. Why had he played the hero and jumped off the boat in the first place? Why hadn’t he simply stayed on board and navigated toward me? He knew better! But I couldn’t waste energy dwelling on it—I had to stay calm. Focused. My survival depended on it.

My head dipped underwater and for a moment I lost sight of Rusty. The current pulled us slowly apart. “Where are you?” I yelled. “I’m scared!”

“I’m right here, Clare. Swim to my voice.”

He sounded so far off! I couldn’t see him. His voice became fainter and fainter, till I heard nothing at all.

I jerked. Something slimy brushed against my leg. The gulf was full of tarpon at this time of year, and tarpon was one of the bull shark’s favorite prey. I tried to swim away, tried not to panic. Thunder rumbled in the distance, and storm clouds suddenly obscured the stars. Swim to my voice, Rusty had said. But I had nothing to guide me now. I was alone.

Not totally alone. I took a deep breath. God, I prayed, it’s you and me now. I’ll fight with everything I have to get back to shore, but I need you to keep me safe. I can’t do it on my own. I need to hear your voice.

I’d never prayed like that before. My girlfriend and I had laughed at a singles meeting at church just a week earlier when the group leader asked us to share our testimony. Testimony?

I’d balked. I was a regular churchgoer and faith was important to me, but I was the practical one in the family. If something needed to be done, I didn’t just pray about it. I made sure it got done.

Now I was desperate. I was in survival mode. The prayer had come so naturally to me, with such conviction, like an inner voice, and for the first time since I’d drifted from the boat, I felt at ease. As I moved, a piece of slippery seaweed got tangled up in my hands. That’s the culprit, I thought. Not a hungry shark after all.

I swam with all the energy I could muster, listening for that inner voice. But my muscles cramped, and I knew that without liquids, the cramping would only get worse. I could experience kidney failure. I looked up at the sky, a hazy moon now hanging almost directly overhead. It must be nearly midnight.

A flash of lightning lit the sky. All at once, the storm clouds let loose a torrent of rain. The winds picked up. Two-foot waves churned and crashed over my head. Raindrops stung my face like a hundred needles. I fought to stay afloat as the salt water flooded into my mouth.

Lord, is this the end?

My leg muscles clenched. I kicked my feet and stayed above the surface, but I couldn’t hold on much longer. I’d never felt so exhausted in my life. I’d promised to keep fighting. But what if I stopped? Would God still help me? Or would I die in the silent waters of the gulf?

I didn’t know what to do but let go. I had no more strength. Wherever the current took me, that’s where I’d go. I felt the tide pulling me out. I stopped kicking. I bobbed up and down in the waves like a piece of driftwood.

The rain stopped. The waves went down. The water became calm. I floated on my back, just drifting, letting go. The moon was bright and full, and the brilliance of the stars enthralled me. I had never felt so peaceful.

My foot brushed against something solid. Sand! I pressed down with both feet. I’d found a sandbar. I’m only five foot two, so I had to work to stay on. But it meant land must be very near. I bobbed in the current and peered into the dark around me. Off in the distance, I saw two faint white lights. The lights moved closer. A car’s headlights!

“Help!” I screamed. I waved my arms. The lights kept moving. “Over here!” I yelled. But the lights disappeared. Had the driver even heard me? Was I just hallucinating?

Then, as if in a dream, the lights returned. They were pointed right at me. “I see you!” a man’s voice called out. “Swim to me.”

“I can’t!” I shouted. “I can’t see anything!”

“Swim to my voice!” he shouted back. Swim to my voice. I gathered all my strength and pushed off the sandbar. I was back in the open water, swimming with all I had left.

The man’s arms wrapped around me. He’d walked out into the water chest-deep and pulled me to shore. He guided me to his truck and wrapped me in a blanket.

“You have no idea how lucky you are,” he said. Rusty had made it to shore and called 911 a half hour earlier. The Coast Guard had sent out an alert that I was missing, and my rescuer, a park ranger asleep at home, had heard the call on his radio and started looking for me. It was 3:15 a.m.—I’d been in the bay almost seven hours, an amount of time verging on unsurvivable in open water.

“You really hung on, didn’t you?” the ranger said. I just nodded. I couldn’t explain that my survival wasn’t dependent on hanging on but letting go.

Download your FREE ebook, A Prayer for Every Need, by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale.

Survey Reveals How God Speaks to Us

If someone told you they sometimes hear voices, you might think he or she was nuts. And yet, how many of us have heard a voice that came out of the blue, seemingly outside ourselves, that we chose to either listen to or ignore?

It’s a phenomenon we’ve observed in the stories told to us by the readers and contributors of Mysterious Ways, and we were curious to find out just how common it is.

To do so, we commissioned the first survey of its kind to determine how many believe that these mysterious thoughts, urges, and sounds represent the voice of God. How would they describe it? Do these experiences have certain themes in common? More than 3,000 people responded to our multiple-choice “Have You Heard the Voice?” survey in the October/November 2016 issue of Mysterious Ways, both by mail and online. After weeks of tabulation, we’re happy to finally share the results!

READ MORE: WHEN GOD SPEAKS…

Fascinatingly, 68% of respondents are certain that what they’ve heard is from God (22% were unsure). Two-fifths described it as “a thought or idea that I wouldn’t have had on my own,” while nearly a third heard “an audible voice.” And when “God speaks,” 64% do what he says immediately.

Click through our slideshow below, or go here to view the full breakdown of responses.

Many readers also sent in their personal stories. Click here to read our favorites, which reveal the variety of ways those with faith believe God reached out with a message they needed to hear. You can share your own experiences with us here.

Subtle Signs

Recognizing miracles just takes practice.

I once read of a primitive tribe in Africa who sends each teenager out to live in the jungle alone for a certain time period.

While there, the kids’ main purpose is to commune with tribal spirits, and then to bring back advice and perspectives to the elders. The clan expects this interaction, and it happens.

In our more “sophisticated” society, such events as angel sightings or miracles aren’t as readily expected. I think we miss a lot of signs from heaven not because they aren’t there, but because we aren’t conditioned to watch for them. We expect miracles in epic proportions.

But I think miracles are more often very subtle. They’re intimate signals from God that happen every day to people of all faiths, small touches that often go unnoticed. We would more readily recognize these glimmers if we were aware of their possibility.

During this week, it might be fun to take note of how many times we ask God for little things: a parking place, healing a child’s cough, that the milk lasts through dinner—and see how many are quietly addressed.

These marvels won’t be covered by the press. It’ll be you, communing with the Spirit.

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Find more blogs and articles by Joan Wester Anderson.