We have been receiving many many thank you notes for our Pleasanton Military Families Christmas pack out boxes. They arrived and were opened with joy! Yeah. Here is a real nice note and photo from a happy sergeant.
Friday, December 28, 2018
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Devastating News from our PMF President
Life is so precious. So unpredictable.
Saturday we joyfully packed boxes for our troops.
Tuesday we delivered the boxes to be mailed.
Today we learn from Azi's son, (name withheld), that one of the Special Forces Green Berets that we sent boxes to was killed in the IED explosion over the weekend. Three were killed, four more wounded.
We were sending boxes to Sergeant First Class Eric Emond, 39, in the Army for 21 years. He was our contact for one of the Special Forces units in Afghanistan. He was to receive 20 boxes from us to distribute amongst his team. Afshin confirmed the boxes will go to the team Chaplain and still be distributed.
AFC Emond was married and has three little girls under the age of 6.
If we are able to find an address to send cards or something for the children, I will share it with PMF.
Our hearts ache. I have included a link to a story on these 3 brave men from the Military Times.
Please take the time to read and remember these men. They are all heroes to us. We graciously thank those who gave all...pray for their families.
Respectfully,
Capt. Andrew Ross, from left, and Sgt. 1st Class Eric Emond, both Green Berets with 3rd Special Forces Group, and Air Force Staff Sgt. Dylan Elchin, of the 26th Special Tactics Squadron, were killed Nov. 27, 2018, when their vehicle was hit by an improvised explosive device in Andar, Ghazni Province, Afghanistan. (DoD)
The entire story is found below:
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
Now Starring: SUCCULENTS!
For Mirna, who I met in Trader Joe's today..
I don't know why or when I started my growing love affair with succulents, but I am indeed smitten by the seemingly endless variety of these flower like, cactus like plants. They are the perfect choice for our unclear weather and drought forecast so I thought I'd put a few of my garden's lovelies up for show…
I don't know why or when I started my growing love affair with succulents, but I am indeed smitten by the seemingly endless variety of these flower like, cactus like plants. They are the perfect choice for our unclear weather and drought forecast so I thought I'd put a few of my garden's lovelies up for show…
This Escheveria is in a planter in the back yard patio.
Another type of Escheveria…one with ruffled leaves…this is my oldest having been
in a pot on my front porch for at least 20 years…I never watered it so it was very slow growing!
(above)These are planted in the ground in the front entry way where it gets baking sun all summer. I got them from Home Depot I think.
(above)Also planted in the ground in the entry way…they get more shade…I love the red
border and the gorgeous green.
A new grouping of plants that I transferred from other smaller pots…the contrast is wonderful I think.
(above) These two types of succulents are planted in pots in the back patio…I sheltered them from
the frost all winter long and they made it fine!
Back to the beginning…beautiful right???
The more water they get, the more they grow, but even with very little water, they do extremely well in our hot summer weather.
Saturday, December 9, 2017
Pondering Galatians 2:20
note to myself
i was walking and thinking that i don’t see myself like Paul did in Galatians 2:20.
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live.”
What does that mean? I don’t feel crucified. I feel like that never happened. I forget that. But Jesus never forgets he was crucified because he bears the scars on his body. All he has to do is look down at this hands and feet and ribs. He never forgets his sacrifice on the cross. Which means he never forgets us.
I have been crucified with Christ...It must mean that on the same day that Christ died to the world, I also died to the world. The day he was crucified is the day I was crucified. I died with my sins on the cross when he took the punishment for my sins and buried them with him. If this were not true, would he not have to be crucified again and again every time a lost person became a saved person so that each person could be crucified with Christ? No, he died once for all that all might live in him. Crucified once for all.
But since I am still alive, I easily
forget that I have been crucified to the world.. I see the world and feel it’s influence every day. I need to think like this:
I have the same marks on my hands and feet as Christ as proof I was crucified.
I was nailed to the cross with him. My sins were nailed to the cross in him.
When he rose, he carried me with him. We are one person. I am walking around in his shoes. His skin.
My physical life is not my life. My spiritual life is my real life, my born again life is the only life that matters. ( “The only thing that counts is a new creation.”)
That way, my attitudes can be Christ’s attitudes because I am in him, walking around in him and what comes out of me is him. His attitudes about the world. And I know he is not moved by the world,...the money, the anger, the protests, the stupidity, the cruelty, the rage. Because he lives on the other side of those things. He has overcome those things. They cannot touch him.
And thus, they cannot touch me. In him, I am protected.
So I don’t need to engage in worldly arguments or folly or hate or defend any position other than this: talk about Jesus because that is what the world needs. Before you talk, stop and let God talk to you about what to say. Be confident in him.
You are walking around in his shoes, alive because he lives. The holy spirit is your mark...your tatoo ...your reminder...proof of his scars from the cross. I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in Christ who loved me and gave himself for me.
Jesus words:
You are in the world, not of the world.
Do not be surprised if the world hates you, it hated me first.
I am not of this world.
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
July 4th 2017
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
-The Declaration of Independence
July 4, 1776
"It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do
not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery"
Galatians 5:1
"For you, brothers, were called to freedom; but do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh. Rather, serve one another in love.
Galatians 5:13
"Oh say does that star spangled banner yet wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and the war’s desolation!
Blest with victory and peace, may the heav’n rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!"
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!"
Francis Scott Key 1814
We owe so much to the brave men and women who have served brothers and sisters in love..so that we may enjoy freedom and continue the call to serve. Happy Independence Day!
Sunday, June 4, 2017
Cards, Letters & Care Packages
June 3, 2017 was a big day for Pleasanton Military Families. First, they put on the 7th Annual Pancake Breakfast complete with military in uniform and HumVees in attendance. Next up, the PackOut for 32 active military deployed around the world. It was an even bigger day for my neighbors and special friends Reed, Alyssa and me…our first Pack Out together. I invited Reed (11 years old) and Alyssa (2nd year of college) to join me and they were eager to find out what it was all about.
First order of the day for us was to write some messages to the troops to put into the care packages. Cards, colored pencils, stickers, sharpies and practice paper all ready for action. I was so impressed with their sincerity, desire to share meaningful messages and their very creative artwork.Alyssa drew a picture of downtown Pleasanton and our famous arch with an American Flag flying away. Impressive! Reed added his own red, white and blue artwork to his written message.
Cards finished, we headed downtown to the Veterans Memorial Building. Reed and I got to walk right across the park and into the HumVees. A young Army officer asked Reed if he was interested in the military. Reed smiled and answered, "Yes, I am." Who knew??? He climbed into and out of the HV. They chatted and Reed learned that only 20% of recruits are engaged in combat and that the military employs people to do every job inside that exists outside the military…photographers, cooks, journalists accountants and so on.
Inside the hall, boxes were ready for us to fill.
But first, family members of deployed were asked to give an update on their sons/daughters. As if on cue, one father explained that the thing his son loved most about the boxes was the cards and letters that people wrote to him. WOW! We did that! Reed and Alyssa were beaming. After we walked the rows, filling our boxes, Reed addressed our envelopes with the name of the soldier who would open our box. Personal and heartfelt.
We were lucky that the boxing crew was somewhat small this year so we got to pack 5 boxes in all. (I usually only get to do one box)
The surprising news is that we ran out of supplies before we filled all the boxes! Never happened before. So we have a big job to refill all of our supplies before the next Pack Out in November. Alyssa wants to be there with her own cards to add to the boxes. Reed and I finished the morning with a medium vanilla cone from MeadowLark Dairy while he told me all about his upcoming summer vacation to Boston where no doubt he will add to his appreciation of the military impact on our nation. According to Reed,
"Thank you for risking your
life for our freedom."
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Love in a Box
Right in my own town, Pleasanton Military Families (PMF) is making a difference every day in the lives of very important people-our men and women in service as well as in the lives of their families here at home.
The next PMF Pack Out to our deployed military is coming up in March. A flurry of emails has been coming my way regarding preparation for the event.
I wanted to pass on one of these emails: the thank you letter that arrived in my "IN" box today...from a chaplain stationed in Afghanistan. He has been sharing the contents of PMF care packages that come his way.
The next PMF Pack Out to our deployed military is coming up in March. A flurry of emails has been coming my way regarding preparation for the event.
I wanted to pass on one of these emails: the thank you letter that arrived in my "IN" box today...from a chaplain stationed in Afghanistan. He has been sharing the contents of PMF care packages that come his way.
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