Earlier this week, my sister was sitting on her patio, when what to her wonderous eyes would appear, but…a guinea pig! Given we were raised to be kind to all living creatures, she immediately scooped up the very tame invader. Made it a safe haven in a large, plastic storage box, went to the store and bought it food, and posted on all of the neighborhood websites. No one contacted her. Another 24 hours passed.

It was obvious either the guinea pig had escaped, or someone just let her go. Another day passed. Then my sister posted a free, to good home only ad on a neighborhood website. Within an hour, she was contacted, and Miss Piggy went to swank new home replete with every rodent amenity.
For some reason this event danced in my mind. I do not accept the Bible literally; I believe it to be a compilations of stories written over 500 years after the birth of Jesus. These stories were designed to teach us morals…like Aesop’s fables. Thus when St. Luke writes: there was no room at the inn for Joseph and his pregnant wife, the lesson was really? There’s always room for more. More guests at the dinner table, more dogs to adopt, more children to be loved.
Certainly, my sister could have shooed the piggy away, but her morality forbade it. May we all embrace the spirit, instead of:











As some of you know, my mother turned 95 on October 1. When each of her grandchildren phoned with birthday greetings, she told them: I just wish we could all be together again. An event that hasn’t occurred in 7 or 8 years!






I suspect like many of my readers, our adult children moved out and moved on. Certainly, was my case, but they left behind lots of stuff from their childhood. My youngest was an avid Beanie Baby collector; so much so, we had to scour the airport shops and every toy store both in Phoenix and wherever we traveled. At the time, Beanie Babies were a bigger craze than Tickle Me Elmo or Furbies.