Laughter is the best medicine, and the Women of Faith® speakers definitely know how to lose themselves in laughter. Laugh along with them as they share sidesplitting stories and hilarious jokes that are sure to get a giggle - and perhaps a belly laugh - out of every reader.
Sharing a Laugh will entertain and delight you with humor from: Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh, Thelma Wells, and others.
Laughter is the best medicine, and the Women of Faith® speakers definitely know how to lose themselves in laughter. Laugh along with them as they share sidesplitting stories and hilarious jokes that are sure to get a giggle - and perhaps a belly laugh - out of every reader.
Sharing a Laugh will entertain and delight you with humor from: Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh, Thelma Wells, and others.
Sharing a Laugh: Heartwarming and Sidesplitting Stories from Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh, and Thelma Wells
240Sharing a Laugh: Heartwarming and Sidesplitting Stories from Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh, and Thelma Wells
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Overview
Laughter is the best medicine, and the Women of Faith® speakers definitely know how to lose themselves in laughter. Laugh along with them as they share sidesplitting stories and hilarious jokes that are sure to get a giggle - and perhaps a belly laugh - out of every reader.
Sharing a Laugh will entertain and delight you with humor from: Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh, Thelma Wells, and others.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781418571795 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Nelson, Thomas, Inc. |
Publication date: | 04/01/2007 |
Sold by: | THOMAS NELSON |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 240 |
Sales rank: | 253,102 |
File size: | 790 KB |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Sharing A Laugh
By Patsy Clairmont Barbara Johnson Nicole Johnson Marilyn Meberg Luci Swindoll Sheila Walsh Thelma Wells
Thomas Nelson
Copyright © 2007 Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh and Thelma WellsAll right reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8499-1866-7
Chapter One
Tea Time and SupperMarilyn Meberg
Laughter and bread go together. -Ecclesiastes 10:19 MSG
I had said, "Never in a million years will I move from Palm Desert, California, to Frisco, Texas." With typical regional arrogance, I believed California to be the only place on earth worthy of loyalty and affection.
So why did I sell my condo in Palm Desert and buy a house in Frisco? Well, here's what seems to have happened. My friend Ney Bailey was driving me around Frisco one morning in search of a good spot for a photo shoot the next day. The photographer wanted an outdoor scene with trees. I've lived in an apartment in Frisco for a few months each year simply because flying from Dallas during our heavy travel season is easier than flying out of Palm Springs, but in those years I didn't ever remember seeing trees. For that matter, I had not seen any hills either, but we apparently didn't need a hill. Ney knew where there were some trees.
We settled on the spot for the photo-shoot but as we were driving away, I saw a house. It beckoned to me. It didn't have any trees, but it was on a lake. The lakeis lovely and only a stone's throw from Luci Swindoll's new house. It's four doors down from Nicole Johnson, a three-minute walk from Mary Graham, and a five-minute drive from Sheila and Barry Walsh. I bought the house and moved into treeless Frisco on December 18, 2004. Mercy!
What a wonder all this is. What draws me to do what I said I'd never do is not only God's relentless pushing and pulling but my love of community. My community is fast congregating in Frisco. God seems to think I need to be there. I like that about Him. I didn't put that plan into motion; He did.
Why is community so important to me? I'm sure it's because I'm an only child. I am energized by the presence of people. Growing up in somewhat isolated and rural communities, I didn't always find a sufficient number of people around. Thank goodness for Mrs. Dunbar.
Mrs. Dunbar was a short bike's ride from my house in Amboy, Washington. We had a weekly tea time at three o'clock each Tuesday. I loved visiting with her because she made the best cookies I've tasted in my short 206 years on this earth. Each Tuesday she made a different cookie for our tea times. When I'd walk into her old rambling house across the street from Wires Cleaners, I'd nearly faint from the glorious smell of just-out-of-the-oven cookies. But not only did I love her cookies, one of her favorite activities in life was to laugh. We made a great pair because it's one of my favorite activities as well.
Mrs. Dunbar had an ill-fitting pair of false teeth that clicked when she talked. She would put me in hysterics by sliding the bottom teeth out of her mouth as far as she could. The goal was to keep them from falling to the floor before she managed to lift them high enough to touch the end of her nose. When she succeeded, we rewarded ourselves with another cookie. By the way, it was considered cheating to use her hands to help the teeth touch the end of her nose.
I was devastated when Mrs. Dunbar died suddenly of an apparent heart attack. Her son told my father how peaceful she looked lying in bed when he found her. Everything was in order: glasses on top of her Bible, aspirin bottle on the night stand beside her teeth in a glass. I knew it would sound weird if I asked permission to have her teeth, so I kept my mouth shut. But the memory of her laughter and the sight of her teeth meant the world to me. I'd love to live in a community full of Mrs. Dunbars.
The Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn said, "It is not the level of prosperity that makes for happiness but the kinship of heart to heart and the way we look at the world that knits us together." Those are my requirements for a successful community. Amy Cella, Nicole Johnson's assistant, is also in this community. She not only meets the requirements, but she, too, is only minutes away from the rest of us. There is a special kinship of heart between us.
Last Sunday some of the community had brunch together after church. I turned to Amy and asked, "What's the best thing that happened to you this week?"
Without the slightest hesitation she said, "I bought a cow." That was one of those delicious fork-dropping moments.
"You what?" nearly everyone chorused. I was envisioning PetSmart and wondering how such a purchase could be made.
Sheila, who was absolutely incredulous, said, "Why? Why would you want to buy a cow?"
I was still lost in PetSmart.
"I bought the cow for food," Amy said.
Still unable to fathom this action, Sheila said, "Are you that sick of grocery shopping? You know our new Kroger is a nice store-it's only two minutes from your house."
"No, that's not the problem," Amy persisted. "I just want to raise my own beef. I'll feed it only the best 'cow food' and be sure it gets superior care."
Patsy warned Amy about getting attached to the cow.
Sheila suggested not giving the cow a name to restrict possible bonding.
"Oh, I've already named the cow," Amy said. "I'm going to call it Supper. Then after it's grown I can invite people for Supper."
I did one of my spontaneous and obnoxious hoot laughs; there was no getting me under control, in spite of the many disapproving looks I got. That laugh was as hearty as those inspired by Mrs. Dunbar's touch-the-nose-with-the-bottom-teeth trick.
Actually, as I thought about it, I fully understood what Amy is doing. She is raising her recently purchased Supper on a ranch about fifteen minutes from here. We used to do the same thing in the Amboy days. Dad would buy a beef cow, raise it on Harry Hooper's farm, and then off to slaughter it went. We would then stop by Boehm's Deep Freeze every few days and bring home supper. I remember hating it, though. I had named one of the suppers Molly and felt tremendously disloyal as I looked at her on my plate.
Recently I read a newspaper account of a ninety-one-year-old woman who was enthusiastically joining neighborhood friends for a slumber party. The party was from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. They came in robes, pajamas, and slippers and left whenever they got tired. I can see that happening some thirty years from now in Frisco. I love the notion of being with my dear community right up until the time of slumber parties.
It was Plato who said, "Let me tell you, the more the pleasures of the body fade away, the greater to me is the pleasure and charm of conversations." The only pleasure Plato failed to mention that so characterizes my community is laughter. We will always have conversation ... we will always have laughter. What a joy!
-Contagious Joy
Chapter Two
Fashion Non-SenseMartha Bolton
Why do we do it to ourselves? Generation after generation of women have willingly exposed themselves to the high risk of pantyhose strangulation, girdle-induced respiratory arrest, and turtleneck tracheotomies. What kind of sick people punish themselves like this?
Even men, for some unknown reason, are into some forms of fashion self-punishment. If you don't believe me, just look at the necktie. Who came up with that idea? Did some fashion designer from the Wild West watch a hanging one day and say, "Now, there's a look that could really catch on"?
Some otherwise intelligent, levelheaded women have sentenced themselves to a lifetime of girdle incarceration. Every morning they insist on squeezing their bodies into those torture devices, one layer at a time. Once it's past the knees, the real tug of war begins. Up a little on the right, up a little on the left. If they're not careful, they can lose their balance and end up doing a little ballet across the room. Actually, it might be more like an opera when you consider the high notes they'll hit every time one of the metal stays pokes them in the ribs.
I've done it myself, and it leaves me asking one simple question-why? Why do we as thinking human beings do these incredibly punishing things to our bodies?
The most torturous of all has got to be pantyhose. Frankly, I can't imagine how the patent office ever approved the original application for this stuff.
"A nylon half-body suit that fits like a tourniquet but gradually loosens throughout the day until it falls in folds at the ankle like ribbon candy. And it comes in colors. Patent granted. Women'll love it!"
Spandex punishes both sexes. And in some cases, it punishes the onlooker, too. It takes a certain physique to be able to wear spandex, and many of the people we see wearing it these days have seriously violated the Spandex Rules of Engagement.
Sweats, on the other hand, are our reward for having endured decades of fashion abuse. Sweats are comfortable. Roomy. And forgiving. They keep us warm in the winter and cool in the summer. They come in a multitude of colors, and while they don't look that great with high heels and pearls, they do fit in on most occasions.
I guess the bottom line is this: our clothes shouldn't punish us. Adam and Eve may have been acting out of guilt when they first put some on, but that was a long time ago. The debt's been paid.
-I Think, Therefore I Have a Headache
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Sharing A Laugh by Patsy Clairmont Barbara Johnson Nicole Johnson Marilyn Meberg Luci Swindoll Sheila Walsh Thelma Wells Copyright © 2007 by Patsy Clairmont, Barbara Johnson, Nicole Johnson, Marilyn Meberg, Luci Swindoll, Sheila Walsh and Thelma Wells. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Table of Contents
Contents
Part 1 Can You Believe I Did That? Laughing at Ourselves ... with Others Tea Time and Supper / Marilyn Meberg....................3Fashion Non-Sense / Martha Bolton....................8
Celebrating Camaraderie / Luci Swindoll....................10
In Search of a Giggle / Patsy Clairmont....................13
Angerless Charade / Sheila Walsh....................15
Living in God's House / Luci Swindoll....................16
Weighty Matters / Patsy Clairmont....................20
We Are Relaxed / Marilyn Meberg....................22
Part 2 Laugh? I Thought I'd Die! Laughing When It Hurts Putting on the Ritz / Cathy Lee Phillips....................29
Is This a Disaster-or a Pimple-Level Problem? / Max Lucado....................36
Cheer Up! / Barbara Johnson....................38
Surviving All Those Aggravating A-teds / Thelma Wells....................39
Sharing Comfort in the Cesspool / Barbara Johnson....................42
The Fun of Imperfection / Sandi Patty....................43
If You're Happy and You Know It ... / Thelma Wells....................47
Lord, Did You Misunderstand? / Natalie Grant....................48
Keep Your Joy, No Matter What / Thelma Wells....................51
Filling Your Blessing Basket / Sheila Walsh....................56
Finding Joy in a Cluttered-Up Sunset / Thelma Wells....................61
Family Adjustments / Sandi Patty....................62
Back-Alley Laughter / Thelma Wells....................66
Look for the Laugh / Barbara Johnson....................69
Being a Friend, Even When It Hurts / Jan Silvious....................74
Bringing Your Pity Party to a Screeching Halt/ Thelma Wells....................75
God's E-mail / Marilyn Meberg....................78
Part 3 Is This Funny, or Am I Losing My Mind? Trying to Remember Why We're Laughing Brain Fractures / Patsy Clairmont....................81
The Limpings of the Well-Intended and Misinformed / Marilyn Meberg....................84
If Only I Had a Brain ... / Ann Luna....................86
Are You the One? / Barbara Johnson....................89
It's Gotta Be Here Somewhere / Martha Bolton....................91
Learning the Hard Way / Thelma Wells....................93
The Joyful Trickster / Marilyn Meberg....................94
Doing and Being / Luci Swindoll....................97
My Little Chickadee / Marilyn Meberg....................100
Cleaning Up after the Chaos / Sandi Patty....................101
Are You Talking to Yourself Again? / Thelma Wells....................104
Pondering Backward / Luci Swindoll....................106
Part 4 Family Funnies Laughing with Our Loved Ones The Big Day / Sheila Walsh....................111
It's a Man Thang! / Thelma Wells....................115
Daddy Goes with Me / Luci Swindoll....................116
Brace for Impact! / Barbara Johnson....................118
God's Heart for His Girls / Jan Silvious....................121
Don't Be Mad, Okay? / Lowell Streiker....................124
Yahoo! / Sheila Walsh....................125
God (and Uncle Bob) Bring Christmas / Mary Graham....................128
A Little Too Much Time on the Road / Sandi Patty....................131
A Sweet Reprieve from Cucumbers / Chonda Pierce....................132
Baby Doll / Patsy Clairmont....................137
I Know Where I'm Going / Sheila Walsh....................139
Mama T's Light-Bulb Moment / Thelma Wells....................141
Baby, It's Cold Inside! / Patsy Clairmont....................144
Does This Thing Come with Directions? / Sheila Walsh....................145
Big-Girl Talk / Jan Silvious....................147
If It's Important, Write It Down! / Sandi Patty....................150
Part 5 Healthy Hilarity Laughing Is Merry Medicine Regarding Food ... / Cathy Lee Phillips....................155
The Butcher's Scales / Sheila Walsh....................156
Fat Farm Failures / Barbara Johnson....................158
Hundred-Dollar Ringworm / Marilyn Meberg....................162
Touchy about Being Touched / Barbara Johnson....................166
Laugh It Up / Martha Bolton....................168
The Year We Had Head Lice / Sandi Patty....................170
Guilty Pleasures / Luci Swindoll....................175
The Perils of Exercise / Barbara Johnson....................178
Nonsense in Their Veins / Luci Swindoll....................179
Find the Joy! / Sandi Patty....................181
My Favorite Excuse / Barbara Johnson....................182
Part 6 Get Outta Here! Laughing at Life's Ridiculous Moments On an Olympic Scale, I'd Give It a 7.4 / Ann Luna....................185
Surprised by Doubt / Sheila Walsh....................189
Climb In, Little Piggy? / Max Lucado....................193
Spending Christmas with a Rodent / Mary Graham....................195
Saving My Satin Pillows / Marilyn Meberg....................198
God's Garden / Patsy Clairmont....................201
Riding Shotgun with an Ex-Con Angel / Ann Luna....................203
Public Speaking, Cesspool-Style / Barbara Johnson....................207
Luci's Law / Luci Swindoll The Problems Started with the Birthday Cake / Ann Luna....................210
Trying Not to Hiss / Marilyn Meberg....................213
Honing Our Humor / Barbara Johnson....................218
Expect Delays / Patsy Clairmont....................219
The Marriage Proposal / Luci Swindoll....................222
An Early Engagement / Sheila Walsh....................223
Acknowledgments....................227