Posts by John Staiger (Page 103)
Twenty-eight Day Diet
Fewer things on earth make you want to run for the comfort food than having to take dieting seriously. Also, fewer things on earth seem to outnumber the choices of diets available. The diet industry has become so big that you can’t help but wonder if can even afford to succeed. Dr Oz has come up with a 28 day diet. Not being an expert on the subject, myself, but having been forced to look at the subject, I noticed…
Twenty-seven Million Souls
Probably, for most people, Madagascar is solely defined by Ben Stiller and Chris Rock in the hugely popular ‘Madagascar’ movie franchise. For any country to be conspicuous when placed beside the massive African continent, is a feat unto itself. All appearances are that Madagascar is a land of extreme contrasts for the 27,000,000 souls living on this large island. My interest was piqued in recent years when I read that they still have outbreaks of the plague. I searched the…
Twenty-six Miles
Since Pheidippides is a name that doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, it is hardly surprising that he is best remembered by one guy as ‘that guy who ran 26 miles and they named the Olympics after him.’ No wonder such conversations, like Pheidippides himself, suddenly stop dead. In fact, he was the runner who took the news of the Greek’s victory over Persia to the people in Athens. He ran the 26 miles from Marathon (the site of the…
Twenty-Five to Life
There’s a silly joke that tells about a lady on an assembly line. One day she broke down in tears and couldn’t be consoled. When she finally could speak, she confessed to her co-workers that she had considered murdering her husband but couldn’t go through with it. “It is wonderful that you felt you could share that with us,” one of the ladies said. “And feel free to cry when you need to; we understand.” Incredulous, the lady snapped back,…
Twenty-Four—Breaking Down the Day
Larger than life writer, Harold Hill, in his autobiographical book, ‘How to live like a King’s Kid,’ tells the story about taking a carload of friends for a ride. He had recently become a Christian and he and his new-found Christian friends were traveling through town, when he heard a terrible noise coming from under his car. The only thing he thought appropriate to do was to praise the Lord as the car rolled noisily on. Wanting to make sure that…
Twenty-three—Still Number One
When John 3:16 was surpassed by “Judge not, lest ye be judged” as the most quoted verse in the Bible, it really did confirm a shift in religious thinking. But when it comes to our need for comfort and hope we still look to the words of an ancient song to settle our hearts and lift our spirits on our worst days. Who hasn’t heard these beautiful words: “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want”? These, the opening…
Twenty-two Richest Men
I read a report that claimed that the world’s 22 richest men own more wealth than all 325 million women in Africa combined. If anything shows the disparity between rich and poor, this does. But if you talk to the average citizen in one of our developed countries, you may get the impression that we are struggling. Of course, compared to our developing country cousins we are doing rather well. It has been said that if all the money in…
Twenty-one—That Key thing!
Back in the day Melanie sang that song, “I got a brand-new pair of roller skates, you got a brand-new key…” I remember debating one of my siblings as to what the ‘key’ was supposed to be. I argued that it was one of those symbolic keys that was hung on the walls of every second house in the neighbourhood. Those key shaped mirrors given by the proud parents to their child who had turned 21 at some stage. Counter…
Twenty Twenty—Do you see what I see?
One day you wake up and realise that life is short. You start to process the future differently. Too much time has been wasted. You must refocus and have a new vision for the future. But old habits die hard. Going in a new direction is hard work. What must a Christian do? Goals? A ‘to-do’ list? All good, but what I am suggesting instead is a ‘Reality-Reset.’ Our lives are consumed with the seen. We keep our heads down…
Nineteen—’No turning back!’
Remember the song with the repetitive “N-n-n-n-nineteen”? It told us that the average age of a combat veteran in the Vietnam War was 19. Vietnam War photos scream ‘youthfulness,’ that’s for sure. My father went off to WWII being 10 years older than that. I am sure that the first thought that went through his head when bombs started raining down around him was, “When can I get out of here?” He never spoke of it. He had favourite stories…