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Hello everyone. I have recently become acquainted with a lady in San Diego, CA who has formed an organization called Rest Ministries. This is a site that posts encouragement and resources for those of us with chronic illness. Or some of you may have a friend or family member who suffers from a chronic condition like arthritis, lupus, fibromyalgia, heart problems, or many, many other conditions.
Trying to do it all alone is a daunting task for anyone, and Lisa has asked me for my help in finding "guest bloggers" for publication on one of her publications / web sites. Due to time constraints, please forgive the weird formatting for the writer's guidelines pasted below. I'll try to fix it later.
September 14-20th is Invisible Illness Awareness Week
ABOUT HOPEKEEPERS MAGAZINE
Our Readers: Writers should keep in mind that they are writing for a diverse group of people: men and women, all ages from 17 to 90 (most in 40-50's), married and single, full-time employed to bedridden, wealthy to extremely poor, and those with a strong faith to non-believers. Illnesses are very diverse; articles should not be about a specific illness-most of our audience would not be able to relate with that particular illness. Style: HopeKeepers has been described as "a letter from a friend" and "a hug from God." Articles should be written in an upbeat, personal tone about how to cope with and thrive during the day-to-day issues of living with illness/pain, using Scripture to validate the point. Please read the magazine carefully before submitting materials. Some short articles are secular, and articles have a side bar that reflects on scriptures, etc. The magazine is "non-believer-friendly," as it is available in many public locations and we hope non-believers will find it interesting and comforting, as it addresses their health concerns. Articles should refrain from using language that assumes a reader's familiarity with Christian or church-oriented terminology.Our Editorial Needs: Articles should be of subject matter that "can't be missed." Your title should be able to be on the cover page and motivate someone pick it up, whether at a church or a doctors' waiting room. We are a CONSUMER magazine, not an "about our ministry publication." It should contain real-life anecdotes from yourself or others, as well as quotes/advice from noted Christian professionals. Statistics and research need to be referenced. We're looking for articles that are not available in any other publication and that will make a subscriber hang onto their copy for years to use as reference and encouragement. Ideas include: Celebrity interviews, "Yoga and Christianity: Where Does it Cross the Line?" "Our Doctors: How to Pray for Them, Not Just Pay for Them," "6 Ways I Used My Illness to Witness This Week," "Mommy, are You Sick Again?" The best way to know our needs is to look at the cover articles on a magazine like Good Housekeeping, add the illness and Christian slant to it. Writers' personal experiences, from going on a cruise to going to a pain clinic, are also desired. Our topics are diverse, with a chronic illness/Christian perspective: family, parenting, friendship, marriage, health, single life, finances, medical, Christian living, fitness, alternative medicine, household, etc. Writers may share their experience of living with illness/pain, what they have learned, wrapping the article up with Scripture and encouragement for others to "keep fighting the fight…" Note: If you write about your experience of being diagnosed with an illness, refrain from giving details of the medical procedures, doctor's visits and rehab experience. Rather briefly explain the circumstance and then write about your feelings, struggles, how you found hope, etc. Be specific-what worked, what didn't. Don't vaguely say "and then God changed my attitude…" How? Dig deep into your experience for something God taught you and explain how. The article should have an obvious point, other than just sharing your experience. Remember, your experience is likely not unique-your emotions regarding the circumstances are. Express them! Effective organization of ideas is important. Your title must be a "grabber!" If you can't find a title, the content isn't interesting enough. Articles do not have to be fully about living with illness, but should include "illness examples." For example, an article called "Jealously: Avoiding the Temptation to Compare" would share what the Bible says about jealousy, and give personal examples about how we experience it when living with an illness. We do not accept articles that address "I've been healed and if you have enough faith, so will you." Although we believe that God can heal, most readers feel as though illness is their "thorn, allowed by God" and they are looking for ways to be encouraged on how to live joyfully, despite the pain, rather than just live in survival mode. Avoid labeling. Rather than writing "the chronically ill," write "those who live with chronic illness." Avoid using words such as "victim" and "suffering." We accept
fillers and short 1-page articles on helpful information,
health topics, health-related resources, etc. Quotes/Style/Length: Proper acknowledgement and references must be included when applicable. When quoting Scripture, use the New International Version (NIV). (Exceptions can be made). When referencing Scripture it should appear in the following format: "Scripture is here" (book Chapter:verse). [note where punctuation falls.]
Submission: We prefer to receive detailed queries. Your query should state the title, summary of the article, approximate length, why you believe it's a good "fit" for HopeKeepers and it's purpose (ie. "the purpose of this article is to inform the reader about ___ or inspire the reader to ___"). Include your credentials or experience. Provide possible side-bar ideas, professionals you plan to interview, suggested length and date it could be finished. If sending it via postal mail, include a self-addressed-stamped envelope for reply. With your article submission include your name, address, email, telephone number, and a personal biography 2-3 sentences in length, professional or creative. Articles are not returned. If your submission is accepted we may ask for a photo sent postal or emailed at 300 dpi. All submissions are received on speculation. An accepted query does not guarantee purchase of the manuscript. Editors reserve the right to reject any manuscript at any stage. Preference is given to articles submitted via email to rest@restministries.org in Word format for PC (as an attachment) or in the body of the email message. If sending in Word PLEASE remember to include ALL contact information in BOTH the email message and the Word file. If sending it via postal mail (PO Box 502928, San Diego, CA 92150) include hard copy of article, typewritten, double-spaced.Handwritten submissions are not accepted. Please ask a friend to type it for you if you must. Deadlines/Copyright/Compensation: There are no deadlines. If article is accepted there is no confirmed date of publishing until one month prior. HopeKeepers and the author sign a contract that Rest Ministries, Inc. has one-time rights to publish the article. We may request permission to include the article on our website. At this time, there is occasionally monetary compensation, depending on the quality of the writing and depth or research. Past sample issues are available with a 6 x 9 or larger SAE (not stamped) and for $3. Send it to Rest Ministries to: HopeKeepers Magazine, PO Box 502928, San Diego, CA 92150. Great
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US: HopeKeepers is a Registered Trademark of Rest Ministries. | |
I've emailed several of you, but if you and your family (up to 4 people) could use a free hot meal, Oprah & KFC are offering a free GRILLED chicken for everybody! But you have to go to oprah.com/kfc & get the details & download the free coupon BEFORE 1Opm Central Time TONIGHT, May 6th!
You have until May 19th to redeem your original printed coupon. Check it out!
Maybe if YOU don't really need a free meal you could pass the info on to others who do, and/or print out 4 copies of the coupon & gift them to someone in need.
I've tried the new Grilled chicken (just yesterday) & it's good! If you're someone who just looooves BBQ sauce, heat some up at home & pour it on!
ENJOY!
Just read this over on EOnline.com. Please forgive the typed out link
instead of a quick-clicky-on-ee one, but I'm moblogging & I just don't
get all the Vox features options that I have from my PC. Please let
me know your thoughts. This means YOU Dewitte, DKN, Annie, &
Inspirational Place. And of course any other closet or "on the fence"
fans! 8-)
http://www.eonline.mobi/watch_kristin.ftl?id=b66857
One of the magazines I subscribe to is Guideposts. Small in size, I
carry one in my purse when I go off to a Dr's. appointment. Gotta have
something to do while you wait, right?
Guideposts shares short stories about real people & how they got
through hard times. How ironic, then, that Jennifer Hudson is on the
cover of the Nov. 'O8 issue.
By now you've probably all heard of the horrible tragedy that's
befallen the Hudson family. I cannot personally fathom the depths of
shock & sorrow that comes with one's Mother, brother, & nephew being
found murdered!
I had trouble sleeping last night & decided to check out Guidepost's
web site from my cell phone in bed. There I found a brief editorial &
comforting thoughts being sent out to Jennifer.
You can add your thoughts & prayers for Ms. Hudson & her family. Go to:
www.guidepostsmag.com/personal-change/edposts-archive/?i=3640
I hope you'll check out that page & maybe add something to the
comments section. I'm planning to go there later today. In the
meantime, my heart grieves along with the family. May they be
comforted by the wave of love being sent to them during these very
difficult days.
May God bless & comfort you, Jennifer. *gentle hugs*
Hey neighbors, are any of you watching the show "Heroes" on Monday
nights? If so, are you confused? Addicted? I'd love to hear what you
think of it!
Hi neighbors! A couple of you have emailed me, wanting to know if I'm
still alive & well. I want to reassure you that I AM still alive. As
far as the health part is concerned.....well, there's something wrong
with my blood tests which they haven't been able to pinpoint yet. But
until they do I can't have knee surgery. &-/@$#?!!!! VERY
aggravating, but if they did surgery now there'd be a chance that I
could get a blood clot &/or have a stroke! WHEE! Fun times, huh?
Anyway, enough of that boring stuff. I thought I'd toss out MY
Question of the Day. Ready?
If it were possible, what day would you love to live again? Why?
(I'll post my response later). ;-)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blondie
Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2008 15:01:27 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: TAX BAILOUT
To: Chris
I don't know who started this but I wish they were running for office!!
Sent: Tue, September 23, 2008 16:00
Subject:INTERESTING CONCEPT
I'm against the $85,000,000,000.00 bailout of AIG.
Instead, I'm in favor of giving $85,000,000,000 to all Americans as a
"Dividend".
To make the math simple, let's assume there are 200,000,000 bonafide
U.S. Citizens 18+
Our population is about 301,000,000 +/- counting every man, woman and
child. So 200,000,000 might be a fair stab at adults 18 and up.
So divide 200 million adults 18+ into $85 billion that equals to a
hefty "$425,000.00"
My plan is to give $425,000 to every person 18+ as a "Dividend" Of
course, it would NOT be tax free. So let's assume a tax rate of 30%.
Every individual 18+ has to pay $127,500.00 in taxes. That sends $25.5
Billion right back to Uncle Sam.
But it means that every adult 18+ has $297,500.00 in their pocket. A
husband and wife have $595,000.00.
What would you do with $297,500.00 to $595,000.00 in your family?
Pay off your mortgage - "housing crisis solved"
Repay college loans - "a great boost to new grads"
Put away money for college - "it'll be there"
Save it in a bank - "create money to loan to entrepreneurs"
Buy a new car - "create jobs"
Invest in the market - "capital drives growth"
Pay for your parent's medical insurance =E 2 "health care improves"
Remember this is for every adult U S Citizen 18+ including the folks
who lost their jobs at Lehman Brothers and every other company. If
we're going to re-distribute wealth let's really do it...instead of
trickling out.
If we're going to do an $85 billion bailout, let's bail out every
adult U S Citizen 18+
As for AIG - liquidate it and Sell off its parts.
Sell off the real estate. Let the private sector bargain hunters cut
it up and clean it up.
Here's my rationale. We deserve it and "AIG doesn't" we were not
invited to the last 10 years of "party time" bonuses.
And remember, The this plan only really costs $59.5 Billion because
$25.5 Billion is returned instantly in taxes to Uncle Sam.
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