Travel and Living

Tuesday, July 06, 2004

6:17 AM Posted by Admin
The Little White Chapel
By Dawn Rambin
I love to go on road trips. It doesn't matter where.

One Sunday afternoon, my best friend Evelyn and I decided to drive from our hometown of Phoenix, Arizona, to a gem and mineral show a couple of hours away. Evelyn was excited about expanding her rock collection. I was just thrilled to be heading out on a new adventure.

After a while, we turned onto a deserted stretch of highway and passed a large white sign on the side of the road. It stated simply: Pause, Rest and Worship.

"What's that?" Evelyn asked. It was strange to see a sign like that in the middle of nowhere. What did it mean?

About a quarter mile down the road, we spotted a small white chapel sitting by itself in a field. As we drove past, we wondered: Who would build this tiny church out here - and why? We turned the truck around to find out.

As we started down the dusty trail and got closer, we noticed how small it really was. It wasn't much bigger than a playhouse, maybe eight feet across and twelve feet deep. There were little flowers planted around the outside and a little white cross was perched on top. There wasn't a sign or any literature telling us what it was called or describing its history. Was it in fact a church? Were we on private property? Should we be here? Would it be all right if we went inside?

Cautiously, we got out, looked around and walked toward the chapel's tiny door. It was open. We stepped inside.

There were four wooden pews, each would seat two people. I sat down. As I admired the simplicity and the beauty of the little chapel, I beheld its beautiful stained glass windows. A sense of profound calm came over me. All was quiet. Still. Peace.

I noticed a plaque hanging on the front wall. I got up and walked toward it. It was from the man who had built the chapel.

This was his farm. He had built this chapel to celebrate all of the many blessings that God had given him in his life. He had lived a very long and happy life, blessed with a wonderful wife, many healthy children and a farm where he had worked and lived.

On the altar at the front of the chapel lay a guest book with its pages open. Written at the top was a note: "Rest, pray, enjoy the chapel. Stay as long as you like."

As I turned the pages, I noticed the countries: Japan, Israel, France, Brazil .. . . people from all over the world had found their way to this little white chapel.

I looked around for a place to leave a donation. There wasn't one. This man just wanted to share his special place with strangers who might need a brief respite on their long journey.

It has now been two years since my visit to the little chapel, and this is my first Christmas without my mother. I lost her last year to heart failure. We were very close and I miss her so very much.

As I was out shopping for presents, I suddenly stopped and the reality sunk in. Mom wasn't going to be here to get her present this year. She wasn't going to help me cook the turkey. She wasn't going to look across the table and smile at me as if to say everything would be all right.

I wanted to see her face when she opened up her gift. I wanted to cook with her and receive her warm smile. For the first time, I would spend this holiday without my mother, and it would be that way for the rest of my life. I was feeling very alone and wasn't sure how I was going to make it through the season.

At that moment, I looked up and right in front of me, on a display table, stood a small white ceramic chapel.

Immediately, I was taken back to my little white chapel in the dusty desert. Once again, I could feel the peace of its refuge, the strength of its love. I recalled the man who had built it out of gratitude for life's blessings, and then I remembered my own life's blessings. Suddenly, I felt myself smiling my mother's smile, and like the little chapel, I know that she, too, would always be there with me on my journey through life.

Saturday, April 10, 2004

7:11 PM Posted by Admin

Sunday, January 25, 2004

2:00 AM Posted by Admin
who aim to canvas the world and visually map it with pinpoint accuracy. Combining the GPS craze known as "geocaching" with an unbridled love of adventure, these shutterbugs have already created an impressive array of regional and thematic albums that are browseable by photographer, category, or popularity. Click on the world map, then zero in on a region, say, the East Coast. Geographically related albums such as Salem Witch Trials of 1692, unusual phenomenon, and rural Virginia will appear in a list. The photos in each album are plotted on a map of the immediate area. Neat, huh? If you'd like to contribute, you'll need a GPS receiver to mark your location coordinates, then upload the images to the site. We can't think of a more exciting way to map the world

1:59 AM Posted by Admin
We're suckers for movie lists, no matter how silly or chauvinistic. Even though this one makes a few regrettable choices, we appreciate that each film on the list cites a key scene (e.g., the chainsaw number from Scarface) and a key line ("Leave the gun; take the cannolis"). We were pleased to see classics like Bullitt, Dr. No, and The Searchers included in this catalog of testosterone-driven flicks. But Blade? Please. Whither Das Boot? Why not Breaker Morant? And no Point Blank? For shame. Still, we applaud the Men's Journal message: "True guy movies don't like to hit you over the head with their message. They just like to hit you over the head.

1:58 AM Posted by Admin
Benetton's Colors Magazine presents this haunting collection of old portraits culled from mom-and-pop photo studios around the world. The images move across the screen horizontally, transforming your monitor into a giant scrolling canvas. In this impeccable montage, you'll find Israeli women in uniform, Indian fairground attendees, and QuinceaƱeras in Chicago. Every subject does his or her best for the camera: "Sitting in the closed environment of a photo studio -- even if it's a piece of cloth stretched over a bamboo in a far-off Gujarat cattle market -- you are momentarily reassured. Life is briefly under control, and you are being recorded." The honest portrayal of a culture is captured and transformed into tomorrow's memories

1:56 AM Posted by Admin
Punctuality is the virtue of the bored. Evelyn Waugh

Friday, January 09, 2004

7:15 PM Posted by Admin
When people tell you how young you look, they are also telling you how old you are. Cary Grant

Saturday, August 16, 2003

Saturday, June 14, 2003

8:38 PM Posted by Admin
The hardest job kids face today is learning good manners without seeing any.

Thursday, June 05, 2003

7:05 AM Posted by Admin
Since all are brothers in the world, Why is there such constant turmoil?

Saturday, April 19, 2003

9:59 PM Posted by Admin
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9:58 PM Posted by Admin
Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving us wordy evidence of the fact. George Eliot

Saturday, April 12, 2003

Sunday, March 02, 2003

7:19 AM Posted by Admin
What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.William Morrow

7:18 AM Posted by Admin
A human activity having for its purpose the transmission of the highest and best feelings to which men have risen.Leo Tolstoy, on the purpose of art

Sunday, February 09, 2003

12:05 AM Posted by Admin
Every man's work, whether it be literature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself. Samuel Butler (1835-1902) British writer.

12:04 AM Posted by Admin
Face your deficiencies and acknowledge them; but do not let them master you. Let them teach you patience, sweetness, insight. Helen Keller

12:04 AM Posted by Admin
He can do more for others who has done most with himself. S.D. Gordon

12:03 AM Posted by Admin
If I had my life to live over again, I would have made a rule to read some poetry and listen to some music at least once a week. Charles Darwin