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The Call at Midnight

We all know what it's like to get that phone call in the middle of the night.  This night's call was no different.  Jerking up to the ringing summons, I focused on the red illuminated numbers of my clock.  Midnight.  Panicky thoughts filled my sleep-dazed mind as I grabbed the receiver.

"Hello?"

My heart pounded.  I gripped the phone tighter and eyed my husband, who was now turning to face my side of the bed.

"Mama?"  I could hardly hear the whisper over the static.  But my thoughts immediately went to my daughter.  When the desperate sound of a young crying voice became clearer on the line, I grabbed for my husband and squeezed his wrist.

"Mama, I know it's late.  But don't… don't say anything, until I finish.  And before you ask, yes, I've been drinking.  I nearly ran off the road a few miles back and…"

I drew in a sharp shallow breath, released my husband and pressed my hand against my forehead.  Sleep still fogged my mind, and I attempted to fight back the panic.  Something wasn't right.

"And I got so scared.  All I could think about was how it would hurt you if a policeman came to your door and said I'd been killed.  I want…to come home.  I know running away was wrong.  I know you've been worried sick.  I should have called you days ago, but I was afraid… afraid…"  Sobs of deep-felt emotion flowed from the receiver and poured into my heart.

Immediately, I pictured my daughter's face in my mind and my fogged senses seemed to clear.  "I think - "

"No!  Please let me finish!  Please!"  She pleaded, not so much in anger, but in desperation."

I paused and tried to think what to say.  Before I could go on, she continued.

"I'm pregnant, Mama.  I know I shouldn't be drinking now…especially now, but I'm scared, Mama.  So scared!"

The voice broke again, and I bit into my lip, feeling my own eyes fill with moisture.  I looked at my husband, who sat silently mouthing, "Who is it?" I shook my head, and when I didn't answer, he jumped up and left the room, returning seconds later with the portable phone held to his ear.  She must have heard the click in the line, because she continued.

"Are you still there?  Please don't hang up on me!  I need you.  I feel so alone."

I clutched the phone and stared at my husband, seeking guidance.

"I'm here,  I wouldn't hang up," I said.

"I should have told you, Mama.  I know I should have told you.  But when we talk, you just keep telling me what I should do.  You read all those pamphlets on how to talk about sex and all, but all you do is talk.  You don't listen to me.  You never let me tell you how I feel.  It is as if my feelings aren't important.  Because you're my mother you think you have all the answers.  But sometimes I don't need answers.  I just want someone to listen."

I swallowed the lump in my throat and stared at the how-to-talk-to-your-kids pamphlets scattered on my nightstand.

"I'm listening," I whispered.

"You know, back there on the road, after I got the car under control, I started thinking about the baby and taking care of it.  Then I saw this phone booth and it was as if I could hear you preaching about how people shouldn't drink and drive.  So I called a taxi.  I want to come home."

"That's good, honey," I said, relief filling my chest.  My husband came closer, sat down beside me and laced his fingers through mine.  I knew from his touch that he thought I was doing and saying the right thing.

"But you know, I think I can drive now."

"No!" I snapped.  My muscles stiffened, and I tightened the clasp on my husband's hand.  "Please, wait for the taxi.  Don't hang up on me until the taxi gets there."

"I just want to come home, Mama."

"I know.  But do this for your mama.  Wait for the taxi, please."  I listened to the silence, fearing.  When I didn't hear her answer, I bit into my lip and closed my eyes.  Somehow I had to stop her from driving.

"There's the taxi now."

Only when I heard someone in the background asking about a Yellow Cab did I feel my tension easing.

"I'm coming home, Mama."  There was a click, and the phone went silent.

Moving from the bed, tears forming in my eyes, I walked out into the hall and went to stand in my sixteen-year-old daughter's room.  The dark silence hung thick.  My husband came from behind, wrapped his arms around me, and rested his chin on the top of my head.  I wiped the tears from my cheeks.

"We have to learn to listen," I said to him.  He pulled me around to face him.

"We'll learn.  You'll see."

Then he took me into his arms and I buried my head in his shoulder.  I let him hold me for several moments, then I pulled back and stared back at the bed.  He studied me for a second, then asked, "Do you think she'll ever know she dialled the wrong number?"

I looked at our sleeping daughter, then back at him.

"Maybe it wasn't such a wrong number."

"Mom, Dad, what are you doing?" The muffled young voice came from under the covers.

I walked over to my daughter, who now sat up staring into the darkness.  "We're practicing," I answered.

"Practicing what?" she mumbled and laid back on the mattress, her eyes already closed in slumber.

"Listening," I whispered, and brushed a hand over her check.

Author Unknown


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Can you match the people in column one with their mother?


1.    Boaz

2.    Cain & Abel

3.    Isaac

4.    Ishmael

5.    Jacob & Esau

6.    Jesus

7.    John the Baptist

8.    Joseph & Benjamin

9.    Mahlon & Chilion

10.  Obed

11.  Perez & Zerah

12.  Reuben

13.  Samuel

14.  Solomon

15.  Timothy

                        A.    Bathsheba

B.    Elizabeth

C.    Eunice

D.    Eve

E.    Hagar

F.    Hannah

G.    Leah

H.    Mary

I.    Naomi

J.    Rachel

K.    Rahab

L.    Rebekah

M.    Ruth

N.    Sarah

O.    Tamar


Answers



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Motherhood

My husband and I had been happily (most of the time) married for five years but hadn't been blessed with a baby.  I decided to do some serious praying and promised God that if He would give us a child, I would be a perfect mother, love it with all my heart and raise it with His word as my guide.

God answered my prayers and blessed us with a son.  The next year God blessed us with another son.  The following year, He blessed us with yet another son.  The year after that, we were blessed with a daughter.

My husband thought we'd been blessed right into poverty.  We now had four children, and the oldest was only four years old.  I learned never to ask God for anything unless I meant it.  As a minister once told me, "If you pray for rain, make sure you carry an umbrella."

I began reading a few verses of the Bible to the children each day as they lay in their cribs.  I was off to a good start.  God had entrusted me with four children and I didn't want to disappoint Him.

I tried to be patient the day the children smashed two dozen eggs on the kitchen floor searching for baby chicks.

I tried to be understanding when they started a hotel for homeless frogs in the spare bedroom, although it took me nearly two hours to catch all twenty-three frogs.

When my daughter poured ketchup all over herself and rolled up in a blanket to see how it felt to be a hot dog, I tried to see the humor rather than the mess.  In spite of changing over twenty-five thousand diapers, never eating a hot meal and never sleeping for more than thirty minutes at a time, I still thank God daily for my children.

While I couldn't keep my promise to be a perfect mother - I didn't even come close - I did keep my promise to raise them in the Word of God.  I knew I was missing the mark just a little when I told my daughter we were going to church to worship God, and she wanted to bring a bar of soap along to "wash up" Jesus, too.

Something was lost in the translation when I explained that God gave us everlasting life, and my son thought it was generous of God to give us his "last wife."

My proudest moment came during the children's Christmas pageant.  My daughter was playing Mary, two of my sons were shepherds and my youngest son was a wise man.  This was their moment to shine.

My five-year-old shepherd had practiced his line, "We found the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes."  But he was nervous and said, "The baby was wrapped in wrinkled clothes."  My four-year-old "Mary" said, "That's not 'wrinkled clothes,' silly. That's dirty, rotten clothes."

A wrestling match broke out between Mary and the shepherd and was stopped by an angel, who bent her halo and lost her left wing.  I slouched a little lower in my seat when Mary dropped the doll representing Baby Jesus, and it bounced down the aisle crying, "Mama-mama."  Mary grabbed the doll, wrapped it back up and held it tightly as the wise men arrived.

My other son stepped forward wearing a bathrobe and a paper crown, knelt at the manger and announced, "We are the three wise men, and we are bringing gifts of gold, common sense and fur."

The congregation dissolved into laughter, and the pageant got a standing ovation.  "I've never enjoyed a Christmas program as much as this one," laughed the pastor, wiping tears from his eyes.  "For the rest of my life, I'll never hear the Christmas story without thinking of gold, common sense and fur."

"My children are my pride and my joy and my greatest blessing," I said as I dug through my purse for an aspirin.

Author Unknown

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Dumb & Dumber

Police in Wichita, Kansas, arrested a 22-year-old man at an airport hotel after he tried to pass two (counterfeit) $16 bills.



The Chico, California, City Council enacted a ban on nuclear weapons, setting a $500 fine for anyone detonating one within city limits.



A convict broke out of jail in Washington D.C., then a few days later accompanied his girlfriend to her trial for robbery.  At lunch, he went out for a sandwich.  She needed to see him, and thus had him paged.  Police officers recognized his name and arrested him as he returned to the courthouse in a car he had stolen over the lunch hour.



Police in Radnor, Pennsylvania, interrogated a suspect by placing a metal colander on his head and connecting it with wires to a photocopy machine.  The message "He's lying" was placed in the copier, and police pressed the copy button each time they thought the suspect wasn't telling the truth.  Believing the "lie detector" was working, the suspect confessed.



When two service station attendants in Ionia, Michigan, refused to hand over the cash to an intoxicated robber, the man threatened to call the police.  They still refused, so the robber called the police and was arrested.



A Los Angeles man who later said he was "tired of walking," stole a steamroller and led police on a 5 mph chase until an officer stepped aboard and brought the vehicle to a stop.

Author Unknown

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Mom's List of Things She Doesn't Want to Hear

  1. I swallowed the goldfish.

  2. Your lipstick works better than crayons.

  3. Does grape juice leave a stain?

  4. The principal called...

  5. But DAD says that word all the time!

  6. What's it cost to fix a window?

  7. Has anyone seen my earthworms?

  8. I painted your shoes pretty, huh Mommy?

  9. The dog doesn't like dressing up ibn your underwear.

  10. I'm running away from home.  (Well, maybe some days.)

Author Unknown





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