Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Hope Lights the Way to a Cure for MS:




December 16, 2016
by Jamie Hughes
In A Life in Letters – A Column By Jamie Hughes


“This first candle in the advent wreath,” I told my kids as I clicked the lighter and set its flame atop the wick, “represents hope. What does that word mean to you guys?”

In the warm glow of the purple taper, we talked about everything from wishes and Christmas presents to the thornier topics of politics and peace. And while it wasn’t a perfect discussion, I think it accomplished the spiritual goal of the ceremony—to get us all thinking about the future.

If you’ve never used an advent wreath to mark the weeks leading up to Christmas, I highly recommend doing so. It is a rich and interesting practice begun by Martin Luther and observed by many Christians. In brief, it works like this: Each of the four Sundays before December 25, you light a candle and reflect on what it represents through responsive readings, songs and prayers. The first week is focused on hope, the second on peace, the third, joy, and the fourth, love. The color of these candles varies depending on denominational traditions, but most use three purple candles and one pink to correspond to the colors of the garments worn by pastors during each Sunday’s service. Also, many wreaths have a fifth candle in the center, a white one, which represent Jesus Christ. That one is lit on Christmas Eve.


Rather than allow this holy season to be hijacked and turned into a glitter-drenched nuisance to be endured rather than enjoyed, traditions like the advent wreath help us remember that we can wait in a sense of anticipation and expectation for the better day that is to come. It reminds us of the reason for our hope. And, as Andy Dufresne says in the film The Shawshank Redemption, “Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.”

After the kids had gone outside to finish their Sunday playing in leaf piles, and my husband had planted himself on the couch to watch the Atlanta Falcons trounce the Arizona Cardinals, I sat drinking coffee and watching that single candle flicker as it slowly grew dark in my cozy kitchen. I thought about hope—where it comes from and what purpose it serves—and what it means to live the tension of what many Christian thinkers refer to as the “already, but not yet.”

I also considered hope in light of MS and the many changes it has produced in my life and realized that rather than snuff-out my faith, the disease has actually strengthened it.

MS is no longer a death sentence, no longer a reason to give up on life. Sure, there are challenges, and each of us walks a different path on the journey to healing and wholeness. But there is more positive news coming out than ever before. I don’t know about you, but I can’t keep up with all the new treatment options doctors are discovering. (There are so many that entire columns on this website are devoted to covering them!) Patients are living fuller lives thanks to therapies and medical assistive devices. Celebrities and “average” folks (though I use that term loosely) are having honest conversations about multiple sclerosis and helping one another by sharing their struggles.

This is no longer a malady that is spoken of in whispers or admitted to in shame. Call me naïve, but I firmly believe a cure for the damnable disease we all know and hate will be found in my lifetime.

Yes, even in the darkest times, there is cause for hope.








In support of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) research:

Never give up!








Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Stephen King Reflects on Childhood in Animated Interview from 1989:




by Blair Marnell
December 13, 2016


Stephen King has been one of the greatest horror novelists for decades, and we’re always interested in hearing what he has to say about writing and the genesis of his stories. And now, one of King’s classic interviews from nearly three decades ago has resurfaced and been reanimated for a more visual story.

Via Laughing Squid, Blank on Blank has released a classic King interview that was conducted in October 1989 by Thomas Smith for The Public Radio Book Show. The animation for this video was created by Patrick Smith and it offered some humorous visuals for King’s words as well as a few visual callbacks to some of his most famous tales including Carrie, and It.

The video opens with King’s reflection on childhood, as he witnessed a little girl lost in her own world of imaginary people while realizing that it was not only very close to what he does as a writer, but something that would get him locked away if he did it in public. King also shared a few thoughts on why the minds of adults are so different from those of children, while once again clarifying that his predilections toward horror were not born out of some childhood trauma that he suffered.

“I think that a lot of what we think of as horror fiction or fiction of the macabre comes out of this sense of futurity that we have,” said King. “As we grow older we become aware of the fact that we are going to die and most of us are going to die in ways that are that are unpleasant. For most of us, it’s there, it’s waiting for us. We understand that on an intellectual level. But I don’t think on an emotional level or a spiritual level we ever quite come to terms with it. Mentally we grasp it, emotionally we can’t quite grasp it.”

King went on to explain how his supernatural horror stories tap into that innate fear of death by serving as symbolic representations of mortality while dealing with those ideas in a way that readers can more easily accept. King compared it to the way that dreams can bring up our darkest fears in a context that let the dreamer experience them while still remaining somewhat acceptable to our sleeping brains.


You can read more of King’s interview at Blank on Blank.

http://nerdist.com/stephen-king-reflects-on-the-origins-of-fear-in-animated-interview-from-1989/