Our Easter Miracle

Tlamb_cakeraffic on the way to my son’s new house for Easter dinner was packed. My sister was in the passenger seat with worry written all over her face. She was concerned that the bumper-to-bumper cars on the three-lane highway seemed to be moving at speeds above 55 mph, leaving no room for error. Then it happened … in less than five seconds.

I heard squealing tires and a thud from my sister slamming her broken foot against the car floor, as she intuitively searched for the brakes. The car directly in front of us slammed on its brakes and cut the steering wheel hard-left toward the inside shoulder. The car braked harder to stop from shooting off the narrow shoulder down into the valley.

With its backend in my lane, I yanked the steering wheel right and moved into the center lane, barely avoiding the car in the center lane that braked and headed to the right lane. The car in front of him also braked and moved right to avoid the spinning car in front of all of us.

I quickly cut left to straddle the dashed line between the middle and left lanes to avoid the other cars braking and moving right. Two other cars in front of me in the left lane lost control and they skidded to a stop with their back ends headed for a collision near the center lane.

I cut right, just missing the cars by a foot or two and swerved into the right lane as the spinning car came to a perpendicular stop. The car in front of me slammed on its brakes and skidded to a stop inches from the perpendicular car, forcing me to cut left, back into the center lane. As I passed the cars I noticed they had a few inches between them.

A miracle had happened. Not one single car had hit another, even though a dozen cars swerved, skidded and came to abrupt stops within inches of each other. There had been no sounds of crushing metal or banging bumpers. All had survived the high-speed incident without contact.

My sister turned to me with amazement in her eyes. “I don’t know how you did that, but you went like this…” she said as she mimicked my fast moves on the steering wheel. “I don’t know how close the cars behind us got, but I saw how close we got to the ones on our sides and how you avoided hitting all the swerving and spinning cars in front of us. All I can say is praise God!”

Awe filled my mind as I thought about those short five seconds. I wondered if my racecar training and certification program years ago had made a difference. I immediately discounted the idea, since none of the dozen cars involved had collided with another. Every driver was the recipient of the same miracle.

I turned to my sister and said, “I can’t tell you if my arm movement was an angel rapidly moving my arms at the right time, or what, but I saw the one car stopped before shooting off into the valley and I didn’t hear any metal hitting on any of the other cars we past.”

“All I’m saying is praise God,” said my sister. “Thank you Jesus.”

“Amen,” I added. “But I think we lost a dish.”

My sister turned to look at the backseat where I had placed five of our hot dishes and the lamb cake she made for dinner.

“I think we lost one,” she said.

A silly thought passed through my mind that put the moment in perspective. We were alive and no one was injured and no car dented.

“I don’t care,” I said. “In perspective, I really don’t care. We’re alive and no one will miss one dish.”

“Well, actually,” she said. “It looks like it landed flat across the dish you placed on the floor. We might be all right.”

I chuckled. I was thankful for our Easter miracle.

© 2017 by CJ Powers

Homeless, Carless and Filled with Miracles

DumpsterThe housing market drop plummeted the value of my residence during the time I ventured back into the film and television industry. Instead of having $45K in equity, I was suddenly under water. If I sold my house, I’d still have to pay an additional $70K back to the bank. Unfortunately, I couldn’t make my mortgage payments and was forced to short sell my house to avoid bankruptcy.

My developing stories weren’t ready to cash in, so finances got very tight. A little project here and there covered my minimum living expenses, but only because close friends and family invited me to dinner often. The generosity of others made a significant difference in my outlook, but I still had to face reality.

If I was living within a tragic story, it was the perfect time for my car to breakdown, which it did. Being without a car in the Chicagoland area was a bizarre experience. Yes, there’s a lot of public transportation, but not at the times of day/night and locations that was necessary for my projects.

The good news is that last week ended on a high note. The house sold and the banks waved the remaining debt – A miracle. I was able to walk away from the house without any baggage. As for the car, it went to the compactor and I was paid enough for scrap metal to cover the towing service that took the heap to the scrap pile – Another miracle.

On the day I was moving out of the house, my helpers pointed out that I needed a 20 yard dumpster for all of the trash, the equivalent of a single car garage packed to the five-foot level. Unfortunately, there wasn’t a waste collector that could provide same day pick up service for under $700, until one person gave me the name and number of a waste collection driver.

The man had time available during his lunch break and a 20 yard dumpster that was only 10-15% full, so he negotiated a cash deal for a third of what others had quoted. He swung by and a half hour later the garbage was gone – Miracle number three.

Moving items into temporary storage was a stressful situation, as we had enough unloading to make our truck return an hour late, incurring overtime charges and penalties. But, miracle four showed up when the truck rental company called. They had just received an identical truck, which meant we could take the rest of the night to empty the vehicle without charge.

There were three other miracles that I counted and I realized that just because a person is down on their luck or having a very bad year, doesn’t mean that someone isn’t watching out for them. Too often we see our circumstances as a thermometer of our physical, emotional, mental and spiritual condition, when in reality it’s just a measure of our circumstances.

A smile comes to my face when I think back on all of the miracles from last week. The biggest miracle being friends and family who worked for hours helping me move a four bedroom house into two 10X10 storage units, not counting the trips to Goodwill and the dumpster.

Those who stuck by my side and the list of miracles both help me to understand that my situation is not me, but only a temporary situation that touches me. I’m not a loser because of my losses, but rather a winner who had friends and family members prove their love through exceptional and humbling service.

While I’d never want to put anyone through that turmoil again, I’m thankful for the faithful few that were there for me when I was overwhelmed. They’ve been endeared to me and etched into my heart. I hope to reciprocate with my service in the future, but if not, I’ll certainly pay it forward to others in need.