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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

Archives for November 2012

Saturday smiles: thankful edition

November 25, 2012

“Give thanks in all circumstances,” the apostle Paul writes to encourage Christians in the early church. Even with more blessings than I can accurately count, I was finding thankfulness hard this week. Paul doesn’t say it’s easy to do, just that we should. Sometimes, you just have to start being thankful and more thankfulness follows.

We had ourselves a Bartelt thanksgiving on Thursday, which meant the kids and I spent much of Wednesday prepping food and ingredients for Thursday’s feast. I made dough using the family recipe. I baked pumpkin bars. I attempted homemade french fried onions, which was less successful than I would have hoped. Phil put the turkey in the brine bath after the kids went to bed, and I formed the dough into rolls and kukelas, a German fried dough that is a Thanksgiving breakfast tradition on my husband’s side.

Here’s what they look like cooking:

The kids had a hand in shaking them in sugar.

And, of course, in eating them.

The sugar is hard to resist. And clean off. Corban spent more time wiping the sugar off his hands than eating the kukelas.

So, I’m thankful for family traditions and the ability to complete them. I’m also learning that even when things are difficult, the effort is generally worth it. Early Wednesday, I had decided I wasn’t going to make the dough, but knowing it’s important to my husband, I did it.

Earlier in the week, a friend invited us to take an afternoon field trip to Hershey’s Chocolate World. It involved a car seat transfer and delayed nap time, but it was SO worth it to do something different for a day and have some great conversation. And look at these kids, don’t they look happy?

I’m thankful for friends. God has exceeded any expectation I’ve had for friends, here and in Illinois.

This same crew gathered for a parade on Saturday. Our kids got excited as the floats were lining up in front of our house. Then, they hauled in the candy. (Because who doesn’t need more candy a month after Halloween?)

This is the first town we’ve lived in that has a holiday parade, and even though it’s generally a cold event, I love it. There’s something magical about listening to holiday themed music while warming your hands around a cup of coffee or hot cocoa, and watching Christmas decorations light up the night. Sort of an official ushering in of the season.

In the coming weeks, we’ll transform the house into a Christmas wonderland, which always makes me happy just to have the decorations up.

And though we couldn’t be with our families on Thanksgiving, we were able to video call, which is another thing I’m thankful for: technology. And our kids upped the entertainment ante this year. Isabelle, after watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, turned every story in her mind into a musical.

Here’s a sample:

[youtube=http://youtu.be/Hv2XOd9Odck]

And the next day, when it was 50-plus degrees and we played outside for two hours, the kids created Pilgrims: The Musical, using the upside-down wagon as their boat, singing praise songs to God.

Here’s a sample of that:

[youtube=http://youtu.be/CkwVotIsMDM]

Reasons to be thankful? Yeah, I’ve got ’em. Sometimes I just need to remind myself.

 

Filed Under: holidays, Saturday smiles Tagged With: cooking a turkey, family traditions, holiday parade, Macy's thanksgiving parade, reasons to be thankful, thanksgiving, video calls

A fish story you can trust: Review of The Fourth Fisherman by Joe Kissack

November 21, 2012

I had just finished reading Life of Pi (the movie version releases today) when I picked up The Fourth Fisherman by Joe Kissack. Both books are seemingly unbelievable tales of survival at sea. The thing is, Kissack’s book is a true story, and I couldn’t help comparing the experience of three Mexican fishermen lost at sea with the fictional tale of Pi’s adventure at sea. The true story lent credibility, for me, to the fictional one.

The Fourth Fisherman is really two stories woven together. Joe Kissack was a high-powered TV executive, walking the red carpet at the Emmy awards. His life was also spinning out of control. Kissack relates his story of alcohol and prescription drug addiction and the card tower of success that came crashing down, leading  him eventually to faith in Christ. He also relates the story of how three Mexican fishermen came to be lost at sea for almost nine months and how they survived with few supplies, a Bible being their main source of survival.

The two stories converge as we learn in the second half of the book how Kissack got the fishermen’s story and the hours and dollars he personally contributed to make sure this story could be told. (He’s working on a movie about the fishermen’s survival.) This part was interesting to me, as a journalist, because I’m inspired by people who know a good story when they see it and go after it for the greater good.

Overall, I think the first half of the book–the stories of the fishermen’s survival and Kissack’s redemption–holds greater appeal for most people, and the second half is anticlimactic comparatively. But it’s a compelling story, and if you’ve read Life of Pi, I think you’ll like Kissack’s true story, too. (A side note for all you Sauk Valley readers out there: Kissack is a Rochelle, Illinois native.)

Click here for the first chapter. And watch a video featuring the author below.

[youtube=http://youtu.be/SbKt_do9fhQ]

——–

In exchange for my review, I received a free copy of The Fourth Fisherman from Waterbroook Multnomah through the Blogging for Books program. Take a moment to rank this review on the Blogging for Books site and be entered to win a book courtesy of the publisher.

Filed Under: Non-fiction, The Weekly Read Tagged With: changed lives, journey, life of pi, mexican fishermen, redemption, survival at sea

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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