Sunday, December 27, 2020

 

Exciting News!  In Times Like These by Diane Krentel Hodge............The book I wrote for my three sons has been published finally by Ampelos Press.  Years ago I started this book so that my children would always remember the "God-stories" that have happened in our family.  Stories of births, family growing up, life-happenings, raising three boys, and tips for growing older etc. are found within its pages.  It can be ordered on Amazon for $9.95 or as an ebook for $2.99! Very Happy to share with you this "forget me not" story.  

Saturday, December 5, 2015

The Legend by Mildred Krentel

There is a legend, somewhat old, that tell it like this:
“Huddled in a far-removed corner of Heaven were three new-fledged angels; their wings were droop-eared, their faces were joyless.
‘Why would God create such a child as that?  He has left the light out of her eyes.’
‘I saw her just before she left for Earth, not five minutes ago, she will not be able to walk….nor talk, not ever!’

And the three young angels covered their faces.
Upon this scene, the God of Heaven and Earth appeared.  His voice thundered forth, ‘Is it not written…who maketh the dumb or the deaf or the seeing or the blind, have not I the Lord?’

And the silence was great.

‘But, Father, do the Earth-people read Your Word?
Can they remember that You love them with an unchanging love?’

And God turned His face away. ‘Could it be,’ He said sadly,’ that they have forgotten so soon the gift of my Son that long ago Christmas Day?  My Love-Gift to all men everywhere…do they yet have need of something more?’

And as they stood there, quietly remembering, God spoke again. ‘Come, small angels, you are now ready for your first Earth-mission.’

To the first angel, He said, ‘You will comfort the mother of this child.  Remind her only I can bind up her aching heart.’

To the second, ‘You are to go to the side of the saddened father.  Whisper softly that-In my presence is fullness of joy.’

To the third, ‘And you I dispatch to take care of this special child.  Keep her in all her ways; bear her up in your hands lest she stumble on a stone.  Then, when you hear me calling, you are to bring her safely back Home again to Me.’

And the three little angels looked up into the loving face of God and burst into songs of praise and joy. And echoing throughout the arches of Heaven were happy hallelujahs and loud amens!


-M.E.K

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The Seasons of a Mother By Miggy Krentel


Mother was in the springtime of her life when I arrived on earth, screaming my lungs out.  She birthed me, fed me, clothed me, cuddled me—-all at my slightest whimper.  She was young and beautiful and full of life. I adored her.

But I began to grow up and as I grew older and wiser, I thought, “My mom is not really as smart as I once thought she was.  And she even has wrinkles. That thought really shattered my universe.  But still I ran to her like an overgrown cub to let her lick my wounds, partly out of habit but mostly from a mystical umbilical cord of loyalty and devotion—a magnetic kind of glue that bound us together.

Suddenly, I was all grown up and ready to leave home.  There was another world out there I knew nothing about.  My love for her was intact but I found I could get along quite nicely without her guiding my every move.  Then that “falling in love” miracle happened to  me and I found the mate I wanted to live with the rest of my life.  Together we feathered our nest with little ones of our own.  Mother was swept into the ripe summer of her life, savoring the freedom of not having little ones tugging at her apron strings.  She smiled a lot more and wore the next size dress with grace and abandon.  She loved to visit and cuddle her grandchildren, but I noticed she did not cry when the goodbyes were said,  Summer was a good time—-for both of us.

Then, before I knew it, my own small ones were big ones.  They looked at me twice when I called and even dared to question my wisdom and years of experience.  My heart thumped sympathetically, as I remembered some of my attitudes of yesteryear.  As the years fell of the calendar like dominoes, I noticed our home was becoming quieter and emptier.  It was time for us to dream.  Perhaps now we could begin to travel.  

Before we realized it, the bloom of Mother’s summer faded and the fall season of her life took hold.  Small, nearly imperceptible changes took place in her life and had a ripple effect on our lifestyle.  We went out of town uneasily, never quite sure of how she would fare when we were gone.

I telephoned every day to see how she was doing and our conversation rambled all over the map.  Then, with no forewarning, and for no apparent reason, Daddy died.  I thought Mother would not have the fortitude or will to make it alone, but she gallantly held her head a little higher and quickened her step whenever I looked her way.  Her one consuming desire was to live by herself.   My husband and I agreed, and we became spectators watching winter swallow her.

When her driver’s license could not be renewed because of her failing eyesight, it was a red flag.  Now, I had two shopping lists and making weighty decisions as to what kind of cereal to buy for the week.

I unwittingly assumed the role of mother and she gradually slipped back into the more comfortable position of child.  It was a stunning reversal and one I did not relish.  When she fell and broke her hip, it was like the first snowstorm-bone-chilling.  Her dependency mushroomed and the head once held so high now drooped disconsolately.  I swallowed the lump in my throat and shut my eyes as I held her hands.


There was one last gift I could give her- indeed, could give to us both.  “ Mother, as long as we both have strength to stretch out hands up to God,, we are fine.  There is not one thing going on in either of our lives that He does not already know. Let’s face winter together, shall we?”

Monday, April 28, 2014

The Face in the Balloon by Mildred Krentel

My Dad, Paul Krentel, was attacked by the horrible diseases of Alzheimers and Dementia in his late 60's.  This dear man lost most of what we knew of him as husband, dad and Pop-Pop.  This story shares some of the learning moments we had together as a family.  Through it all, he emerged out of this cloud as our dad over and again.  If you are going through something similar, you are not alone and God is able to get you through it with victory.  So this is shared with memories of my Dad, wonderful father of six children, successful business man, loving husband, sports lover, chemist, organizer, boat enthusiastand most of all a loving example of God's love in our family.  DKH

Paul shuffled to the bathroom and stood by the sink for long minutes, spellbound by the running water.  Then, carefully, he squeezed a long ribbon of toothpaste on his black comb.

“Honey, that isn’t your toothbrush!”

“Well, you’re wrong,” he snapped back.

Paul lifted the comb to his mouth.  Then he looked at it again.  Without a word he held the comb under the faucet.

“You make me nervous!”  He spat out the words along with the toothpaste.

I knew I did.  I watched him like a mother hovering over a sick child.  Small wonder that he felt smothered.  But each time he wandered out of sight , my fears multiplied.  He pushed wrong numbers on the elevator, forgot where he parked, and couldn’t remember his own telephone number.

Tag ends of torment snowballed in my mind gathering stress as I careened through this new challenge.  What was happening?  My heart was frozen with terror.  We decided to see our doctor.

•••••••••

The neurologist spoke gently as he shared his evaluation.  But, how could anyone be gentle and say the real you was dying?

“A progressive senile dementia often accompanies Parkinson’s disease.”

Paul had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s two years ago, and while that news alone was a time bomb, dementia was a black hole.  I felt myself being sucked into a whirlpool of panic.  God, where are You?

The doctor handed me a book.

“Alzheimer’s disease appears to be the most frequent cause of irreversible dementia in adults.  The intellectual impairment progresses gradually from forgetfulness to total disability.  The cause….is not known, and at present physicians know of no way to stop or cure it.”

“I can’t write. And my eyes jump when I read.  Do I need new glasses?” Paul’s voice was soft and undemanding. Not waiting for answers, he just kept talking, filling in all the empty spots….talking, talking.

“Aren’t there any medicines that can help?”

My heart nose-dived at the doctor’s next words.

“There is no known cure.”

As we left the office, Paul grabbed my hand sadly.

“I’m so sorry for my life.”

We just stood there, his arm around me and my head on his shoulder.  There was nothing left to say.

Bedtime was an oasis.  I tried to pray, but all I could hear was the plaintive cry from the stereo, “ I don’t want to walk without you, baby.”  The words stung like antiseptic on a gaping wound..

God, please God, can You hear me?  You are breaking my heart.  You are letting my husband crumble piece by piece, right before my eyes.  First Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s ….What on earth are you doing?  Please God, please don’t let it happen.  Paul is my love, my best friend.  How can I walk on this earth without him?

And how can there be joy, laughter, or happiness in my life again?  It was all coming to a screeching halt.

I knew we would face all the indignities of the flesh that this disease extracts.  a pound for a pound, helpless in the crush of a dementia that evolves slowly but relentlessly.

The next morning I woke up crying.  Paul snored as I tiptoed into the kitchen to grab a mug of steaming coffee and my Bible.

In the quiet of a home stilled with sleep, I began reading in I Thessalonians 5:16 and 18. “  In everything, give thanks…..rejoice always.”  I slammed down the Bible, a wave of hot anger engulfing me as I stalked out of the room.

He was a difficult God to worship.  I could not understand Him.  He seemed to demand joy in the midst of trials and troubles.  There just was no way I could possible please Him.

Still muttering to myself, I peeked into our bedroom.

Paul’s eyes flew open.  They were twin pools of terror.

“Miggy, my leg, it won’t move!”
I bent over him.

“Does it pain you?  Is it numb?  Should I call the doctor?”   I pulled the blankets back.

“Just help me move my leg.  Grab hold of it.  Do something!  Don’t just stand there1”

Gently lifting the disobedient limb, I helped him sit at the edge of the bed.  He clung to me, as I wrapped my arms tightly around him.

“What’s happening to me, Miggy?” 

I wanted to reply, You are starting down the other side of a strange mountain and I am just as frightened as you are.  But my words hung back. 

Like a slow rerun of our life, I re-lived the valleys that Paul and I had walked through, feeling the pain reel by reel, frame by agonizing frame.  That awful Monday morning when God called our six-month old baby, Martha, home, Paul led me into our bedroom and knelt with me.  We both wept for our tiny daughter until there were no more tears.

Then that September morning, two years later, Melissa Jane, our sixth chip was diagnosed with down’s syndrome.  Paul, again, was the one by my side soothing me in his comforting arms, gently pushing the hair from my face, tenderly wiping my eyes with his big white hankie. 


******

The days that followed crowded together to make weeks, and the weeks squeezed their discouraging days into dead-en months.  Days, weeks, and months of confusion and disbelief.  Then one year passed, a yo-yo experience at best, never knowing what to expect next.  Paul’s descent was alarmingly fast.  His comprehension faded, his coordination vanished.  I was terrified.

And then….one Saturday morning, when the two of us were all alone, Paul fell in the bathroom.  No bones were broken, but he could no longer stand or walk.  His life took another downwards turn.  It became a wheelchair-to-bed existence.

His speech went from bad to worse….a jigsaw puzzle of memory pieces trying to fit into some semblance of reality.  God was allowing this man’s mind to be taken from him, leaving only his outside shell to remind me of the man I knew and loved.  “For better, for worse, in sickness and health..had it been fifty-two years?”

*********

One morning, as I turned the calendar page, I saw that it was March the 13th.  Paul’s seventy-fifth birthday.  Bitterly, I wondered what was left to celebrate.
  A visit from our son and his wife with a cheery basket of flowers made the morning seem brighter.. Another ding-dong at the front door announce some friends with a Happy Birthday cake, candles, and every party plates.  Paul seemed to come alive.

“What all the fuss about?”  He whispered to me.

Again, a knock brought a big cluster of Birthday balloons, shiny mylar ones standing out midst a rainbow-colored assortment.  An apple and orange anchored them in a small net bag.  I placed the balloons in front of Paul as he sat in his wheelchair.  As he reached to get closer to these magical floating objects, I could sense his fascination.  

Paul sat spellbound when he saw his face in one of the big silver balloons.  He held it in both hands.  Turning it this way and that, he looked at his reflection.  then, he opened his mouth and made a funny face, and his mirrored image mimicked him.  He laughed aloud and we all laughed with him. 

When we sang Happy Birthday, he joined in off-key with a hearty “Happy Birthday, dear Jesus!”  We all laughed again.  He downed two pieces of cake,holding on to the balloons with a tight fist.  This was turning out to be a Happy Birthday after all.

This was his world, his joke, and we laughed together as we used to do.  He reached for my hand and would not let me go.  It was as though God had reached down and grabbed my hands to say, “My precious child, I will not let you go.”

There would still be times of happiness ahead, times of laughter and a time for love. “Rejoice?  In everything?”  Was that what God had said?  Big tears ran down my cheeks and splashed on the wheelchair.

I felt a surge of unparalleled happiness sweep over me.  Joy was a gift, straight form God, joy in anything …..joy in everything!  Even this.  I separated the balloons and kissed Paul’s face all over, his eyes, his nose, his forehead, and finally his great big smile.

He glanced up at me, traces of icing on his cheeks and the last half of a fine on his mouth. 

Looking around, I saw the same room, same people, same heartbreak.  Nothing had changed.  Except me!  Kneeling down by his wheelchair, I hugged him to me, my cheek next to his.

I saw our faces, side by side, in the shiny mylar balloon.  He smiled at the balloon.  I smiled, too.  Then he stuck his tongue out, and we laughed together. 

Then, very slowly, Paul pulled the balloon toward his mouth and planted a big wet kiss….on my face….in the balloon!




Monday, April 14, 2014

My Earnest Prayer by Mildred Krentel


Lord,

Send me a surprise,

One that catches me off guard

And makes me wonder,

Like Easter.

Send me a resurrection

When everything looks dead and buried.

Send me light,

When my mind is empty.

Send me a thing to do

When I am just waiting around.

Send me a new friend

When I am alone.

Send me peace

When I am afraid.

Send me a future

When it looks hopeless.

Send me your resurrection

When I die.

I Thessalonians 4
For the Lord himself will come down from heaven with a commanding shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trumpet call of God.  First, the believers who have died will rise from their graves.  Then, together with them, we who are still alive and remain on the earth will be caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air.  Then we will be with the Lord forever.  So encourage each other with these words. 

Monday, March 31, 2014

A Bag Of Tools by Sharpe


A favorite poem of mine…..to share and ponder. DKH
A Bag Of Tools
By:  R. L. Sharpe
Isn't it strange 
That princes and kings,
And clowns that caper 
In sawdust rings,
 And common people 
Like you and me
Are builders for eternity?
Each is given a bag of tools,
A shapeless mass, A book of rules;
And each must make - 
Ere life is flown -
A stumbling block,  
Or a steppingstone.

Don't you just love it?  I wonder……..
Do we so distract ourselves with busy-ness that we can’t focus on this process of building? Do we even realize that our everyday experiences and actions should be building on one another for God’s greater good?
Thought: Stepping stones are used to make our journey easier….over water, rough paths etc. Easy to follow .......with a clear end.  What do these stepping stones for eternity look like, do you think?…. …..love? hope?  peace? kindness? How we work out our salvation.......
 What’s spilling out of your “bag of tools”? Are we fully using them?


Please note: I will be posting for the next few months, every other Tuesday. Not each week. Many of the upcoming postings will be writings of Mildred Krentel which I have recently uncovered in her files.  I think you’ll enjoy many of her pieces, as I have.  So, don’t forget me……just visit me every other week.  

Monday, March 17, 2014

Discipline, A Perspective….” by Diane Krentel Hodge



Ok, I get it.  I know that there is a whole new way of discipline nowadays and I must adjust.  But sometimes, when I go out in public and watch the behaviors of some over-indulged children, I nearly bite my tongue, clear through! 

I’m sixty-six now and I bet younger people think I don’t have any real experiences quite like theirs to even share on the subject. You know,  I wonder if they feel that I can’t empathize because I am too far removed by age or that I’m retired and “out to pasture” so to speak.  It’s kind of funny to me because I joke, that there are not too many people lining up at my door to ask me about how to discipline effectively. What worked ALL those many years ago may not be relevant anymore!

When I was “in the trenches”of child-rearing, I remember asking my Grandmother how I was doing. I didn’t expect she would answer, but after a poignant pause, she said sweetly, “ Don’t forget to be firm and consistent in what you say! Do what you say!”  She went on to explain when you set clear standards of behavior with understood consequences, both positive and negative, make sure you follow through with what you set up.  If I hadn’t asked, I would have continued to muddle through trying this and that hoping to land on something that brought peace in our house. 

While teaching, I remember the time when I had 34 children in my second grade classroom; each child with different abilities and challenging behavioral problems. Recipe for disaster and burnout. But for the most part, we got along just fine all day and even had lots of fun in the process of learning.  Not to say, that everyday was golden, it wasn’t, but for the most part it was a pleasant and a rewarding experience. 

A key factor of success in the classroom was having a discipline plan. Good classroom management correlates with good discipline.  Having no goal in this area means reaching just that…nothing..…and this fails to meet! Each child in your care whether parenting and teaching, is a gift you are responsible for! There is so much at stake with each precious one. They learn so much from you. Long-lastingTraits they  bring with them into adulthood.  

At home and in school, how can we set clear standards of behavior with consequences, both positive and negative to help discipline? 

I have been dying to put it “out there”, so to speak. So here is a list of suggested “old fashioned” ideas that worked for me both as a parent of three boys and an elementary school teacher. 

We can set clear standards of discipline by…….

Modeling positive behaviors for child to imitate e.g. “Watch Joey say ‘please’ when he wants another cookie. Isn’t that polite and good? I know you can do that too!” If children see you modeling  and praising the behavior you are trying to teach them, the impression it makes is imprinted in their minds as children always look up to you to firmly lead the way.

•Using positive peer modeling.  Children learn quickly from their peers, so exposing them to other well behaved children who have a certain skills that can be shared often in friendship….. teaching the observers much.

Exercising praise for positive behaviors ….e.g. “I just love the way you help Mommy pick up the toys. You are such a responsible boy!” A few positive words or pats on the back go a long way in making someone feel proud of themselves and able to “reach the sky”.  Praise, praise, praise…….There can’t ever be “too much”! But it has to be commensurate to a real positive behavior!!! No counterfeits!  Kids know!

Following through consistently when boundaries are over-stepped.  e.g.  Mommy told you that if you continued to hit Billy, you would have to sit in the No-No chair.  Then make sure on the first reminder, that the consequence is carried out! Not after the second or third infraction. Kids learn really fast who means what they say and who doesn’t.  Firmly, yet controlled. Letting a situation escalate to the anger level means that boundaries and follow-through haven’t been clearly delineated in the past and the child knows that. 

•Rewarding targeted behaviors with positive rewards. Let’s say you have had some difficulty with “Johnny” being polite in public….You set up a token system which is not only fun but practically makes the child focus in on the desired result.   e.g. Every time I see you say please and thank you, a token goes in the Happy Jar…..(building up to some desired end…e.g. Ice cream, or token toy). I have used this successful from everything from potty-training to limiting “hissy-fits” for attention when things go wrong.

•Sharing honestly and calmly with a child when you are displeased e.g. an infraction occurs ….at the same time letting them know they are loved or valued in spite of what happened. BALANCE is important here. Also speak to this, as close in time to the infraction as possible.  If you wait too long, the child has already moved on to new things that demand his/her attention.

•Responding appropriately to upsetting situations.  The more you coddle a child with too much sympathy, when something little happens to upset him/her, the more you loose an opportunity to teach the child resiliency. Resiliency will be needed all through their life.  A way to develop this key trait is too model problem-solving or working through a problem calmly with clear steps and words to express their feelings versus outbursts. During times like these we need to lighten up on the sympathy. 

Building  behaviors to produce intrinsic motivation for future patterns of behavior.  Eg. Don’t you feel good inside when you  help others with a happy spirit.  If a child learns that he/she will receive a certain positive feeling  inside from doing something                          
right, the behavior will be much better reinforced.  Not all disciplines and directives should be extrinsic. The child can learn better if he/she sees the benefits of positive behaviors in making himself/herself more happy. All on their own!

Thanks to all for letting this “old gal” share some really old ideas that worked like a charm in my day.

What works for you?
I'll never  be too old to learn a thing or two,  so feel free to share how you feel about this subject.