Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Happy Festivities Season



                                                                                                       26/ Dec/2018

        
 Dear  blog reader

           We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2019
                              May God give you as a present His peace
                                                         Yours
                                                                                   Joyful Small Garden

Saturday, December 15, 2018

Christmas Story


           A Slice of Life   
By Carol McAdoo Rehme
Jean heaved another world-weary sigh. Tucking a strand of shiny black hair behind her ear, she frowned at the teetering tower of Christmas cards waiting to be signed. What was the point? How could she sign only one name? A “couple” required two people, and she was just one.
The legal separation from Don had left her feeling vacant and incomplete. Maybe she would skip the cards this year. And the holiday decorating. Truthfully, even a tree felt like more than she could manage. She had canceled out of the caroling party and the church nativity pageant. Christmas was to be shared, and she had no one to share it with.
The doorbell’s insistent ring startled her. Padding to the door in her thick socks, Jean cracked it open against the frigid December night. She peered into the empty darkness of the porch. Instead of a friendly face—something she could use about now—she found only a jaunty green gift bag perched on the railing. From whom?  she wondered.  And why?
Under the bright kitchen light, she pulled out handfuls of shredded gold tinsel, feeling for a gift. Instead, her fingers plucked an envelope from the bottom. Tucked inside was a typed letter. It was a ... story?
The little boy was new to the Denmark orphanage, and Christmas was drawing near, Jean read. Already caught up in the tale, she settled into a kitchen chair.
From the other children, he heard tales of a wondrous tree that would appear in the hall on Christmas Eve and of the scores of candles that would light its branches. He heard stories of the mysterious benefactor who made it possible each year.
The little boy’s eyes opened wide at the mere thought of all that splendor. The only Christmas tree he had ever seen was through the fogged windows of other people’s homes. There was even more, the children insisted. More? Oh, yes! Instead of the orphanage’s regular fare of gruel, they would be served fragrant stew and crusty, hot bread that special night.
Last, and best of all, the little boy learned, each of them would receive a holiday treat. He would join the line of children to get his very own....
Jean turned the page. Instead of a continuation, she was startled to read: “Everyone needs to celebrate Christmas, wouldn’t you agree? Watch for Part II.” She refolded the paper while a faint smile teased the corner of her mouth.
The next day was so busy that Jean forgot all about the story. That evening, she rushed home from work. If she hurried, she’d probably have enough time to decorate the mantel. She pulled out the box of garland, only to drop it when the doorbell rang. Opening the door, she found herself looking at a red gift bag. She reached for it eagerly and pulled out the piece of paper.
...to get his very own orange, Jean read. An orange? That’s a treat? she thought incredulously.
An orange! Of his very own? Yes, the others assured him. There would be one apiece. The boy closed his eyes against the wonder of it all. A tree. Candles. A filling meal. And an orange of his very own.
He knew the smell, tangy sweet, but only the smell. He had sniffed oranges at the merchant’s stall in the marketplace. Once he had even dared to rub a single finger over the brilliant, pocked skin. He fancied for days that his hand still smelled of orange. But to taste one, to eat one? Heaven.
The story ended abruptly, but Jean didn’t mind. She knew more would follow.
The next evening, Jean waited anxiously for the sound of the doorbell. She wasn’t disappointed. This time, though, the embossed gold bag was heavier than the others had been. She tore into the envelope resting on top of the tissue paper.
Christmas Eve was all the children had been promised. The piney scent of fir competed with the aroma of lamb stew and homey yeast bread. Scores of candles diffused the room with golden halos. The boy watched in amazement as each child in turn eagerly claimed an orange and politely said “thank you.”
The line moved quickly, and he found himself in front of the towering tree and the equally imposing headmaster.
“Too bad, young man, too bad. But the count was in before you arrived. It seems there are no more oranges. Next year. Yes, next year you will receive an orange.”
Brokenhearted, the orphan raced up the stairs empty-handed to bury both his face and his tears beneath his pillow.
Wait! This wasn’t how she wanted the story to go. Jean felt the boy’s pain, his aloneness.
The boy felt a gentle tap on his back. He tried to still his sobs. The tap became more insistent until, at last, he pulled his head from under the pillow.
He smelled it before he saw it. A cloth napkin rested on the mattress. Tucked inside was a peeled orange, tangy sweet. It was made of segments saved from the others. A slice donated from each child. Together they added up to make one whole, complete fruit.
An orange of his very own.
 Jean swiped at the tears trickling down her cheeks. From the bottom of the gift bag she pulled out an orange—a foil-covered chocolate orange—already separated into segments. And for the first time in weeks, she smiled. Really smiled.
She set about making copies of the story, wrapping individual slices of the chocolate orange. There was Mrs. Potter across the street, spending her first Christmas alone in 58 years. There was Melanie down the block, facing her second round of radiation. Her running partner, Jan, single-parenting a difficult teen. Lonely Mr. Bradford losing his eyesight, and Sue, sole caregiver to an aging mother....
A piece from her might help make one whole.




Friday, December 14, 2018

12 Days of Christmas



Gifts given yesterday at the hospital to the children with cancer and sang together joyful Christmas songs to them.


Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Happy Thanksgiving Day! With a Message


A Thankful Heart

By Dan Weaver-White

As we all busily prepare for Thanksgiving each year, we find ourselves using words like thankful and grateful. They seem to flow out of our mouths with such ease that it seems that we use them every single day. There is something about preparing the biggest meal of the year and gathering with our friends and families that puts the words thankful and grateful at the forefront of our minds. When we gather together on Thanksgiving, many of us relay to others all of the blessings that we have in our lives. We go around the table and each person recites his list of things for which he is thankful. In school, we encourage our students to tell us what they are thankful for, and in our churches we sing songs and give testimonials about all the blessings that we have received from God. We seem to think that it would not be Thanksgiving if we did not go through this yearly ritual.

Being thankful on Thanksgiving is a hugely important thing to do, but often once the turkey is eaten, the pumpkin pie has been sliced, and the dishes are washed, we go back to not being as thankful as we know we should be. It is not that we do not have anything to be thankful for, but the ordinariness of our lives and the negative things of the world begin to quickly weigh us down again, and we find ourselves focusing more on the negative things associated with this life than the positive things.
Having a thankful heart and being grateful for all that we have should not be something that we do once or twice a year. It should be a way of life for all of us. When we have a grateful heart, we have more peace in our lives. When we have a grateful heart, we have less negativity in our lives, and we see events and situations in a different light. When we live our lives with a thankful heart, we feel lighter and happier. We feel that life has meaning and that we can overcome all the obstacles that come our way.

I know that in my own life there have been times when it has been a struggle for me to think of something that I am grateful for, but looking back on the valleys of my life now, I can see that there certainly were many things to be grateful for. If the valleys of life do nothing more for us, they teach us just how much we have to be thankful for. Of course, the valleys of life teach us far more than that. They teach us to have faith, to be strong, and to lean on God. They show us that God is still in the miracle- making, prayer-answering business, and soon we realize that had we not walked through the valley we would not have all the blessings that we now have.
I, like so many people, become very reflective during this time of year, and I have increasingly found myself being thankful for the valleys in my life. When we gather on Thanksgiving, we find ourselves being thankful for the same things year after year. The things that we list are so very important, and they certainly are blessings from God that we should be thankful for, but maybe we should try something a little different this year.

Maybe in addition to reciting our usual list of things for which we are thankful, we should find ourselves reflecting more on the things that we did not think were blessings when they first occurred. Maybe we should say that we are thankful for the valleys and turbulent times in our lives. Maybe we should say that we are thankful for the pain that we endured this year, be it physical, mental, or emotional. Maybe we should list the times we have been disheartened or depressed as a blessing that happened to us this year. I believe that if all would do this, we would see just how far we have come because of those trials.

I believe we would see how much God was with us during those times, and I believe that other people would begin to see their own struggles in a very different way. When they see that we can actually be thankful for the valleys in our own lives, they will begin to see the valleys of their lives differently.
We have all been called to bring light to the world. We have all been called to show what miracles God is capable of doing, and sharing our struggles and being truly thankful for them is one of the many ways that we can answer our calling. Being thankful for the struggles in this life and realizing that with God’s help we can overcome those struggles and be better, stronger people because of them will help all of us live every day with a grateful heart. We will find ourselves sharing what we are grateful for, not just on Thanksgiving Day, but every day that we live. Being grateful and truly living with an attitude of thankfulness will lead to peace, and peace matters.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Boys Orphanage



A good deed is never lost. He who sows courtesy, reaps friendship; he who plants kindness, gathers love.—Basil of Caesarea (c. 329–379)

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

November Hospital Activities


Monthly hospital  children cancer visit to do morning arts, music activities..do you wanna help us too?!


Friday, October 26, 2018

Donating Food Today


Round II: last night Rose joint the free food preparation, together by our many dear neighbors friends to donate on the street today. Remembering, celebrate and pay respect about the one year a go cremation day of the Majesty king of Thailand Rama IX



Friday, October 12, 2018

Donating free food

Our neighbors last night busy cooking meals to giveaway for free to Thai people , remembering the Royal Majesty King of Thailand Rama IX.




Monday, October 8, 2018

Great time today

We had today a great time visiting and fellowship for an hour with our dear friends at the nursing home, donating two boxes of yogurts drinks and distributed many "Motivated" magazine.  



Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Hospital September


                                             Live music to hospital children

                                         
                                             Gifts we distributed to everyone 

               


a happy reader got a big book too!!!

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

August Hospital Activities



       We brought gifts and material to do arts activities to a cancer children hospital, so to have a morning full of fun time



Rose taking time with a child: reading together the 25 posters book "Start Early". Teaching aids & morals in English and Thai language


As a reward the little girl she got to read for free a new book "Dino" in Thai with 6 stories





  More rewards to the kids: free CD's music cards and books with a touching story

Monday, August 20, 2018

Boys Orphanage

We met yesterday a sweet orphanage worker to deliver and donate four boxes of yogurt milk to the 150 boys living there.

EId-Al-Adha Mubarak



             EId-Al-Adha Mubarak to all our Muslim friends. 

Saturday, August 4, 2018

I do Care

Never believe that a few caring people can’t change the world. For, indeed, that’s all who ever have.
—Margaret Mead





Thursday, July 26, 2018

You reap from what you sow



Blaise Pascal was an influential French scientist who lived in the 1600s. He completed important works on mathematics and experimental physics. Pascal was also a devoted Christian. He wrote books on grace and the life of Christ, as well as other Christian works.
Through all this Pascal realized that his faith, though intensely personal, could not be merely individualistic.
His love for God drove him to love for the poor. “I love poverty,” he said, “because he (Christ) loved it. I like wealth because it gives a means to assist the needy.” Increasingly Pascal deprived himself so that he could give more. He sold his coach and horses, his fine furniture and silverware and even his library in order to give to the poor. When he received an advance of 1,000 francs for his bus [a horse-drawn carriage that could carry several passengers], he sent the money to the poor in Blois, who had suffered from a bitter winter. He then signed over his interest in the company to the hospitals of Paris and Clermont.
When Pascal died at the age of 39 on August 19, 1662, his funeral was attended by family, friends, scientific colleagues, worldly companions, converts, writers, and the back of the church was filled with the poor, each and every person there someone Pascal had helped during his life.—Charles Hummel
*
We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.—Author unknown
*
Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.
Attributed to John Wesley
*
Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.—2 Corinthians 9:7

Monday, July 23, 2018

Old folks Home

Today we were very happy to socialise with some of the nursing home guest and to know them more personally.




happy today to socialise with some of the nursing home gest.

Thursday, July 19, 2018

July hospital and kindergarten visit

Yes! July hospital visit with arts activities and much more...on the way back we stop to visit our teaches' friends to give meaningful books & some cookies to the small kids.





Saturday, June 30, 2018

July quote






I believe the world is incomprehensibly beautiful; an endless prospect of magic and wonder.
—Ansel Adams


Friday, June 29, 2018

June 2018 Hospital Program

Dear viewers, we come to post the latest activities at the hospital for cancer children. We try every visit to bring something for them. This time we had: a milk box, drinking water and diapers.


Next: modelling different balloons shapes, plus distributing children CD music and Thai/Eng books and do arts activity



Last but not the list...Rose introduced the Start Early Program: a English and Thai posters book aids about teaching positive foundation of moral principles.

 

 

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Legend: The true and the lie



“Legend wants that one day the truth and the lie crossed each other’s.

Good morning. He said the lie.
Good morning. He answered the truth.
- nice day. He said the lie.
So the truth would come out to see if it was true. It was.
- nice day. Then he said the truth.
- the lake is even more beautiful. He answered the lie.
The truth looked towards the lake and saw that the lie was true and nodded.
The lie said:
- the water's even more beautiful. Let's swim.
The truth grazed the water with her fingers and was really beautiful and so trusted the lie.

Both of them stripped and quietly swam
Sometime after the lie went out, he dressed in the clothes of truth and left.
The truth, unable to dress the lie’s clothes, began to walk without it and everyone was horrified to see it like this.

This is the way in which people still prefer to accept the lie disguised as truth and not the naked truth. "

Painting by Jean-léon gerôme
"the truth coming out of the well"

Friday, June 8, 2018

Inspiring Leading Article

PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE
Written by Keith Phillips
If we haven’t lived the drama, we’ve seen it depicted in movies and on TV. The patient in the intensive care unit hovers between life and death while anxious family and friends fidget and pace in the waiting room and hallway, praying for the best, preparing for the worst, scanning the faces of the doctors and nurses as they shuffle in and out of the ICU, and hanging onto their every guarded word. Will the patient survive? If so, will there be permanent damage? Will life ever be the same?
That scene is being played out today on the big stage, and we’re all players. The patient on life support is our world, and the financial policy makers are the medical professionals. The rest of us watch and wait. A near-fatal blow to the economy would have been hard enough to recover from, but looming complications worsen the odds. Will terrorism, nationalism, and base egoism proliferate like viruses in a compromised immune system? Will society’s moral fabric suffer a complete breakdown? With all that going on, can multiple ecological threats be held at bay? Can international relations take the strain? What’s the prognosis?
There is both good news and bad news, as it turns out—bad news in the short term, but good news in the long term. According to numerous passages in the Bible that foretell future events, things are going to get much worse before they get better; but when they get better, they will get unbelievably better!
We can’t stop the bad from happening, but we can prepare for it. To be forewarned is to be forearmed, so the first thing we should do is find out what to expect. The next thing we should do is equip ourselves to go through those things, to come out on top, and to be able to help others do the same. This issue of Activated will get you thinking and moving in the right direction. Be a survivor. No, be a victor!


Wednesday, June 6, 2018

June 2018 Orphanage visit

                            We love to visit and help our orphanage friends

Friday, June 1, 2018

May 2018 inspiration



Few pics of yesterday hospital activities with music inspiration. 
Donated to the teachers: drinking water, diapers, cookies and to the children and adults: uplifting and educational books & CD's music gifts.


Friday, April 27, 2018

Shining Light Into the Darkness


I learned about the work of the artist Pedro Reyes. His musical project titled “Disarm” transformed 6,700 guns that were turned in or seized by the army and police into musical instruments. The guns came from Ciudad Juarez, a city of about 1.3 million people that averaged about 10 killings a day at the height of its drug violence. In 2010, Ciudad Juarez had a murder rate of about 230 per 100,000 inhabitants.
Reyes remarked of the guns he used that this is “just the tip of the iceberg of all the weapons that are seized every day and that the army has to destroy.” But rather than succumb to the despair, Reyes took the very instruments used for violence and created instruments for music
Reyes was already known for a 2008 project called “Palas por Pistolas,” or “Pistols to Shovels,” in which he melted down 1,527 weapons to make the same number of shovels to plant the same number of trees. Reyes stresses that his work “is not just a protest, but a proposal.” His proposal is to take objects of destruction and transform them into objects of creation. It is not by accident that Reyes’s creative work hearkens back to the ancient vision of the prophet Isaiah when on the great day of the Lord “they will hammer their swords into plowshares.” … So instead of objects of destruction, they become objects of creation. Art, for Reyes, is about transformation; about shining light into the darkness. 
(Margaret Manning Shull)



Wednesday, April 25, 2018

March Hospital activities

Arts and colours activities, together with children hospital. Everyone had a great time doing something different then stay in bed looking the seal, sleeping or waiting to be done for the kemeo treatment.