Prøve GULL - Gratis
She Was Angry At Every Cigarette She'd Ever Smoked, But She Was More Angry At God
Guideposts
|October 2019
I was a medical missionary for 25 years. I’d served God faithfully. How could he let this happen to me?
I couldn’t take it anymore. The constant fatigue. The muscle weakness. Needing everyone to care for me. I was supposed to be the strong one. The mother. The woman who helped everyone else. Anger burned inside me. I had to get out of the house. It was a beautiful night. The Farmington River ran nearby—only 300 feet away. It might as well have been miles. What used to take me seconds dragged on for nearly 15 minutes as I walked step by step from my back door. I was exhausted from radiation treatment for lung cancer, and my COPD made it difficult to catch my breath. I felt emotionally and physically spent. Even if I beat cancer, COPD was a life sentence, a disease without a cure.
I collapsed onto the rocky shore. Why me, God? Why are you cutting my life shortly after I’ve served you all these years? All the resentment that had been building since my diagnosis exploded. “I’m not ready to die!” I shouted to the river, but I was really talking to God. Where was my miracle? I picked up a stone and threw it as far as I could into the water.
I’d seen God perform miracles while serving as a medical missionary for such organizations as Kids First, Red Cross and FaithCare. We’d escaped bullets in Rwanda after the ethnic cleansing. In the 1990s, we’d saved lives in Haiti, Sri Lanka, and Guatemala. I’d been at it for 25 years—and loved every second—until it came to a screeching halt in 2016.
The year before, I’d been working with Kids First at a children’s orthopedic surgery clinic in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, when one day I noticed myself getting winded. I was walking uphill, and we were more than 6,000 feet above sea level. It was hot and humid. I’d been on my feet for 16 hours straight. I was 74 years old. Of course, I was winded!
Still, it bothered me enough that I called my internist when I got home.
Denne historien er fra October 2019-utgaven av Guideposts.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Guideposts
Guideposts
A Preview From Walking in Grace 2026
Ours was not a musical family. Dad had a guitar he never played. We kids plucked at the strings, but none of us thought to learn to play it ourselves. As part of a music program in school, I took up the recorder. The hope was to graduate to clarinet and join the band. I liked the recorder and practiced regularly. But my family could not afford a clarinet, and I stopped.
1 min
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
His Cardinal Rule
Why this man has crafted hundreds of redbirds out of wood and given them away
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Their Scrappy Christmas
It looked like they wouldn't have much of a holiday that year
3 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Blankets for Baby Jesus
Could I get my young son to understand the reason for the season?
3 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Legend of Zelda
How learning to play a video game unexpectedly helped this mom in her grief journey
6 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Popover Promise
My first Christmas as a mother had me longing for childhood Christmases with my mom
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
Stitched With Love
If the Lord is willing and the creek don't rise, I know exactly where I'll be every Monday at 3 P.M.
4 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
A Hundred Shades of Green
Day by day, I was losing my daddy to dementia. What would be left of him?
5 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
“MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM HEAVEN”
Four nights before Christmas, and my tree was bare.
2 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Guideposts
The Memory Ornament
I sat at the dining room table, surrounded by craft supplies, putting the finishing touches on my mom's Christmas gift—an ornament that opened like a jar and held slips of paper with handwritten memories of the year.
1 mins
Dec/Jan 2026
Translate
Change font size
