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Subject: November 24, 2006 - Storytime Tapestry Contributors: Helen Dowd; Mary Carter Mizrany - November24, 2006



Storytime Tapestry Newsletter

The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural awareness around the world.

Nov 24, 2006

 

Today’s announcements

 

Remember that all stories and poems were lost because of the computer crash, if you sent me anything in late August, September or October and you haven’t seen it published please send it back again.  Thank you.

 

See below for Storytime Angels

 

Now onto the good stuff!

 

 

 

Today’s Queue Stories

~**~**~

 

Mama, Why Is That Man So Ugly

Helen Dowd

 

 

"Why is that man so ugly, and the mommy so pretty?" Five-year-old Nancy tugged on her mother's arm, and pointed.

"Sh! Sh!" said her mother. "You wouldn't want them to hear, would you?"

"But Mommy, he's ugly! How can that pretty lady stand to look at him?"

The mother glanced toward the couple her daughter was pointing at, quickly taking her child away. But every day during the sea cruise, they saw the couple. Whenever they did, Nancy buried her face in her mother's clothes. "Mommy, I just can't stand to look at him. He is so ugly," she would say.

One day Nancy and her mother, Maria, were on deck, enjoying the sea breeze. The beautiful woman came and stood beside them. She spoke a soft greeting, smiling down at Nancy. Smiling shyly back, while snuggling close to her mother, the little girl blurted out. "Why are you so pretty, and your daddy is so ugly?"

Maria gasped at her daughter's rude question. She was about to scold her when the young woman spoke. "No, wait!" she said, "I've noticed your child looking at us quite often. I would like to tell her a story about my husband, if you will let me."

Maria, although quite embarrassed, nodded her consent.

"First," began the young woman, "My name is Rosella. What is yours?" Learning that the child's name was Nancy, and her mother's was Marie, Rosella invited the two to a table, and ordered three glasses of lemonade. And then she began her story.

* * *

"Five years ago my mother and I were visiting in Florida, where we were staying at a hotel. At the same time there were some service men billeted at the same hotel. One very handsome colonel took special notice of me, persisting that I dine with him. He sent flowers to my room numerous times, and smiled at me every time I happened to come across him. My mother encouraged me to accept his offer of a meal. So, at last I did. It was then he told me that he had fallen in love with me. He asked me if I would like to see him on a regular basis. But I found him most obnoxious, and tried my best to ignore him.

"On one particular day I was especially rude to him, and I know it really hurt him. I had gone into the hotel gift shop to pick up a book to read. And there it was that I came face to face with the colonel. He smiled. He had a beautiful smile, and it made his already handsome face--well, he had the face of an angel. But I didn't return his smile. I flung my head in the air, and walked right by him. I heard him say, 'I guess this is your way of telling me to get lost.' I continued on to my room, and went to bed. My mother was already asleep, and it wasn't long before I was.

"About two hours later we were jolted out of bed by the most ear splitting sound. My mother and I scrambled into our housecoats. It was then we heard the frightening words. 'FIRE! FIRE!' Already we could see the smoky, orange shadows encircling the hotel. Colonel Brown--that was his name--was one of the first ones out of the hotel. He watched as the hotel guests fled to the safety of the fresh air. His eyes frantically searched the group in the court yard, but my mother and I were not there. He dashed inside to see if we had made it to the lobby. We hadn't.

"Firemen were all around, but although they tried to stop him, Lionel broke by them, dashing through the flames to our room. He kicked the door open. My mother and I, trapped and frozen with fright, were just deciding if jumping out the window were an option. It wouldn't have been. We were three floors up."

* * *

Nancy and her mother hadn't touched their lemonade, so engrossed were they in Rosella's story. Nancy had gripped her mother's hand and her eyes were brimming with tears. Rosella paused for a minute, sipping on her lemonade; then she continued.

"Lionel snatched two blankets off the bed, and flung them at us. 'Wrap this around your face,' he commanded—and it WAS a command. Then tossing a small towel around his own face, he commanded, 'Grab my arms, and don't let go until we are outside.'

"Blindly, we allowed ourselves to be guided by Lionel, until we were safely outside. But what we hadn't realized was that the towel had come off Lionel's face. His face was burned beyond recognition. He was taken immediately to the hospital where he was treated for burns all over his body.

"For weeks his life hung on a thread, his face bound completely with bandages. Although he couldn't see me, he knew I was there. My mother, by that time, had gone home. Every day I sat by Lionel's bed, holding his hand and talking soothingly to him. At last they took off his bandages.

"Gone was the handsome face…But to me it was beautiful, more beautiful than it had ever been. He had received those scars because of me. If he hadn't fallen in love with me, I would have been just another hotel guest, and he wouldn't have known to single me out and worry over my mother's and my safety.

"During those weeks of attending Lionel, I had fallen in love with him. While he floated in and out of consciousness, I crooned to him how my scorn had turned to concern, and my concern had slowly been replaced by love. As soon as he was released from the hospital, we married, and have grown more in love with each other every day."

"But how can you stand to look at him?" persisted Nancy.

Rosella smiled. "I don't see his scarred face. I see the face of the man he was before he became scarred. And I see the face of the one who loved me enough to risk his life for me. I see the face of the man who loved me long before I loved him. I see the face of God, because that is what Jesus did—became scarred because of me."

Nancy and her mother saw Lionel and Rosella one more time before they left the ship. Timidly Nancy tiptoed up to Lionel, and smiling shyly, she slipped her hand into his. She tugged on his arm. Lionel, suspecting that she wanted to say something to him, bent his head towards hers. He had been used to being looked at scornfully. He had heard the remarks of both adults and children alike. He had learned to ignore them. Se he was not expecting what Nancy had to say. "Mr. Lionel," she said, smiling up at him. "I don't think that you are ugly anymore. I think you have a beautiful face."

Isaiah tells us that Christ had no beauty that we should desire Him. He would not have been an attractive sight, hanging on the cross, His face scarred from the piercing of the crown of thorns they had placed on His head; His body bloody from the whip lashes; His hands bleeding from the nail wounds. In the natural we would hide our face from Him, as Nancy did from Lionel. But when we accept the fact that Christ got those scars to save us, we no longer look at Him like Nancy did, with scorn. We look at Him as Rosella did after the rescue. We see the face of the One who loved us, who got those scars because of us.

I looked at the dying Man's thorn-scarred face.
I tried to turn away.
I saw the whip-marks on His back,
From the lashes they gave Him that day.
I saw the nails that pierced His hands.
I saw the blood from His feet.
It was then I saw the love in His eyes;
It was then, our eyes did meet.
Again I looked at the Man hanging there.
No longer did I turn away.
I knew His face was scarred for me.
He saved me on that day.

© Helen Dowd

hmdowd@telus.net

 

~**~**~

 

Poetry Corner

~**~**~

  "FAITHFUL WHO PROMISED"

Mary Carter Mizrany

        What   matters   the most
           In Life's scheme of things . . .
     is   NOT predicated upon
        the  trials  it brings ~

      Not   upon whether we're
            In a   GOOD   mood . . .
    Rather what matters is 
           GOD &   HIS   WORD ~

      Emotional swings can oft'
             Lead   us   astray . . .
       Depending ‘pon them may
            Just   get in   the way ~

    What   REALLY matters
               When all's said & done . . .
     Is written   in blood   by 
          The   OMNIPOTENT ONE ~

     Who left Heaven's   glory
                  Not counting   the   cost . . .
         Sweet Lamb of God, JESUS
             Seeking ~ Saving   the lost ~

               By   whose  WORD OF POWER
                         ALL   THINGS   DO    CONSIST . . .
               With whose SPIRITUAL ARMOR
                Satan   we can   resist ~

      YES, what matters   most
                   In   my   point of   view . . .
                Is   FAITHFUL ~  WHO PROMISED
                THE WORD  ever  true !!!

             Mary   Carter   Mizrany©
            May 29, 2003
musingByMary@aol.com
http://www.onwingsoffaith.com

~**~**~

"O, FORGET NOT"

Mary Carter Misrany

Have we forgotten our inheritance
bought with the highest price . . .
the preciousness of promises
because of Jesus' sacrifice? ~

Be still, Father commands us,
know that I AM GOD, says He . . .
The Heaven and earth are mine,
children, I giveth them to thee ~

I count each falling sparrow, yes,
on your head number every hair . . .
let not your hearts be troubled,
for I AM ALWAYS THERE! ~

Blessings I shall not withhold
upon thee they shall pour . . .
it's my desire to show my love
MORE AND MORE AND MORE !

FORGET NOT all my benefits
morning ~ noon and night . . .
I've made you MORE than conquerors
I change each wrong to right ~

From the crossing of every T
every title and every jot . . .
My WORD is writ' in stone
sweet children, O, FORGET NOT!

Mary Carter Mizrany©
September 26, 2006

musingByMary@aol.com

~**~**~

"  HIS  GARDEN  "
Mary Carter Mizrany


God's  Garden is  ALIVE
with  blooms of every kind . . .
some  hearty, sturdy, strong
some  fragile  we do  find  ~

WE  ARE  Father's  Garden
He's  tending  with  such  care . . .
when  one of us  is  wilting 
others call  'pon  Him in  prayer  ~

Sweet  fragrance fills His nostrils
from prayers, in faith, that  rise . . .
mixed with  the fragrant  breath 
of  the  flower  'fore  it  dies  ~

For  it's  been  sorely  crushed
victim of  ole'  slewfoot's  lair . . .
who  hadn't  realized  the  POWER
of  FAITH~BELIEVING  PRAYER  ~

The  healing  balm of  Jesus
swiftly  comes  the  yoke  to  break  . . .
restores  the  flower's  fragrance
renewal  for  The  Gospel's  sake  ~

Balm  of  Gilead,  Sweet  Jesus, 
e'er  near  to  hear  the  pleas . . .
of  the flowers in  HIS  GARDEN
THANK YOU, LORD, I'm  one of  these:-)

Mary  Carter  Mizrany©
February 20,  2003

musingByMary@aol.com

 

 

Carol,
I loved Ron Gold's story about Cold Feet. It must be where the old adage "Cold feet, warm heart" originated. Ron is a great storyteller. Clara

 

Cold Feet......that was a very cute story, Tannia

 

Hartson,

Your columns are so informative -- you're like a walking encyclopedia of useful information!  Keep up the good work! Your friend, David Fox

 

Readers Feedback

 

Have a marvelous holiday.    Thank you for al your work and all the fun!  You always make our days interesting   and  thought provoking.  You give us reason to laugh and to cry.  You make us feel  and that is when we know that we are truly alive.

                                                                                                            Bless you,         Louise

 

 

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Agee, Vance; Apted, Violet; Baker, Kathy; Batt, Al; Berry, Nell; Blaine, Pamela; Boda, Ginger; Booher, Paula; Buhagiar, Victor; Cassady, B.J.; Costner, Joan Clifton; Cavalera, Robyn; Crider, Mark; Dees, Mary; Deming, Barb; Doherty, Maria;  Dowd, Hartson; Dowd, Helen; Gilbert, Robert, Jr.; Gold, Ron; Goodier, Steve; Grisham, Mary-Ellen; Braun-Haley, Ellie; Harris, Kathy Anne; Henry, Linda Ann; Hunt, Sharlett; Hymes, Christina; Jacobson, Gary; Kiser, Roger Dean; Kerens, Claudia; Kevin, Tim; Jenkins, Pamela; Liles, Norma; Lily Jodi Flesberg; Lock, Joyce; Marlor, Janice Bumbalough; Mazzella, Joe; Meeks, Carol; Mizrany, Mary Carter; Morris, Deepak; Ojeibge, Georgewaters; Petry, Dianna Doles; Pringle, Sandra Lewis; Roberts, Susan; Shiveley, Debra; Shaw, Bob; Sims, Richard; Smith; Michael; Streidel, Saskia; Swarner, Ken; Vaknin, Sam; Verhoeff, Jan; Walker, Bill; Walker, Joe; Warner, Gordon, K; Walsh, Sue; Weymouth, Barbara J.; Whirity, Kathy;

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