Battery Park City’s West Thames Park, locally known as Tire Swing Park, will close for repairs 
three months after re-opening. Despite  strong community opposition, NY State DOT went ahead with the controversial $ 9.4 million plan which removed the original playground to accommodate “Pataki’s Promenade,” a plan left over from the previous administration which extended the promenade north, through the playground. The plan also destroyed more than a dozens trees. 

Since its re-opening the park has been plagued with a variety of issues including a tire swing where at least two children were hurt,  poor drainage and cracked safety surfacing. Bill Schoemaker,  (above) father of one of the girls who bumped her head on the crossbar of the tire swing,  demonstrates how the tire can easily reach the cross beam.  The swing was removed. (Photo: Carl Glassman/TRIBECA TRIB.  

Manhattan

The controversial tire swing isn’t the only problem at West Thames Park.

Just three months after the $9.4 million park opened, the water play area does not drain properly, the springy safety surface is cracked and the grass field has turned into a mud pit, according to DNA info.

“We haven’t wanted to close it, because it’s so popular and well used,” said Lisa Weiss, urban design director for the State Department of Transportation, which built the park.

But as the problems added up, the state realized it made sense to close the lawn and playground and fix everything at once. The two-week closure will likely happen later this month or early next month.

The state declined to say how much the repairs would cost. The original $9.4 million came from the Federal Transit Administration’s 9/11 recovery fund.

During the closure, the state will likely reinstall the tire swing that injured several children earlier this summer, said Adam Levine, State DOT spokesman. Community Board 1 gave the tire swing the green light at a meeting last week.

Of the many issues at West Thames Park, parents said one of the biggest disappointments was the lawn, which turned into a mud puddle a few weeks after it opened.

Weiss said the irrigation system was left on too long one night, which compacted the sod and caused poor drainage. The state is still figuring out how to repair the lawn, she said.

irrigation issues on the lawn and poor drainage in the spray shower area have added to the frustration of park users. (Photos: Julie Shapiro/DNA info)

Read/View more:
West Thames Park to Close for Repairs three Months After OpeningDNAinfo – September 14, 2010 – By Julie Shapiro  
Battery Park City Residents Decry Destruction of “Tire Swing Park”
A Walk In The Park – September 9, 2009 

A Walk in the Park: Tire Swing Park To Close for Repairs Three Months After Controversial Construction


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    Jean Levert HoodTexas Hill Country Painter: Three Jalapenos – Oil …


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    Albert Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Right now the Cavaliers are absolutely insane. A lack of urgency and being ok with letting their opponent dictate the style of play caught up to the Cavaliers in this game as the Bulls won 108-106 to get themselves back into the series. What follows is my analysis in numbers and words.

    - This game reminded me of the Steven Wright quote “Right now I’m having amnesia and deja vu at the same time.” At this point I’m pretty sure the Cavaliers are incapable of learning lessons and lack the desire needed to win the NBA Championship. And before you think this is a reaction to just one game, I remind you to look back at some of the things we’ve been saying about this team for the last few weeks. The habits they picked up while sleepwalking through March have ingrained themselves into the team’s DNA. The Cavaliers have forgotten who they are and how to give full effort, and they just keep playing this sloppy, lethargic style of basketball game in and game out. We thought it was just effort and a lack of interest in the regular season. I don’t know how to explain this series away. With the exception of the 1st quarter of game one, the Cavs look like an average basketball team at best. 

    -  Remember how during the regular season the Cavs could count on at least one role player stepping up and making an impact, and we all lauded this as a sign of the team’s depth? Well, the Cavs have a problem. Playoff-itis or Playoff-phobia, whatever you want to call it, has struck this team. Once again, the big 3 all played their game for the Cavs (LeBron had 39-10-8, Antawn had 19-10, and Mo had 21-3) but absolutely nobody else stepped up whatsoever. Parker had 8 points and Shaq had 6, and the Cavs bench took a combined 8 shots, 5 of them coming from Delonte West.

    -  Meanwhile, the Bulls starters continue to slice apart the Cavs defense. Remember, the Bulls were 28th in offensive efficiency this season and Cleveland was the 7th best defensive team. So explain why the Cavaliers have now let the Bulls score 102+ points in each of the last 2 games. The Bulls had 5 players in double figures again, and again had 3 players with 20+ points. It’s easy to say the Bulls were “just hot”, but we could have said the same thing about the Orlando series last year. At some point, you have to look at how Derrick Rose continues to get whatever shot he wants all game long and how many wide open shots Kirk Hinrich was getting despite the fact he was 4-4 from three. When are the Cavs going to get to start putting Delonte West or LeBron James on Rose sooner in the game? When are they going to start taking it personal and putting bodies on the shooters who are killing them?

    -  Mike Brown needs to start adjusting his rotations. Zydrunas Ilgauskas was –8 in 5 minutes and Shaq was –5 in 20 minutes. So why is JJ Hickson still getting just 46 seconds of playing time? We all know that the Cavaliers are going to need their big lineups against Orlando and Los Angeles, but there’s no way to ignore the way the Cavaliers small lineup just destroys teams like the Bulls and Celtics. Mike Brown needs to put his stubborn pride aside and let this team do its thing and demoralize teams like the Bulls. The versatility of this team is supposed to be a strength, so stop treating it like its the plague.

    -  In 3 regular season games, the Cavaliers held Derrick Rose to 17 points per game. In 3 playoff games, they are letting him get 27.33 points per game. That’s quite a defensive letdown. On the other side of the coin, the Cavs bench averaged 29.8 points/game this year, but are averaging just 19.67 points/game. It’s normal for teams to see their bench production drop in the playoffs when playing time shrinks and rotations tighten up, not to mention Playoff-itis setting in for role players, but when your bench is dropping 10 points in production and you’re letting your opponents’ star increase his output by 10 points, that’s a 20 point swing that needs to be made up in the margins. When you’re not dominating the glass and you’re letting your opponent routinely outscore you in the paint (the Bulls edge was “only” 38-32 in this game), that’s a good way to lose those said margins. So the only way for the Cavaliers to be competitive and win in this series is for LeBron to singlehandedly make up the difference. Thankfully, LeBron is doing just that.

    -  What does Anthony Parker bring to this team that warrants playing 28 minutes? It’s pointless to bring up because it’s never going to change, but when what you have is so clearly not working properly, why not at least try giving Daniel Gibson some meaningful minutes? Maybe he’s still hurt, I don’t know, but even if he is, I don’t think it’s the injury that’s keeping him from playing. But in 28 minutes Parker was 2-7 from the field for 8 points, 6 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 turnover, and a lot of mediocre defense that led to a –4 rating. During the season Anthony Parker was a Net –0.3 defensively while Daniel Gibson was a Net –1.9 defensively. You can say Parker is bigger as the excuse for him getting so much time, but when Gibson has so clearly outplayed Parker when given a chance this year, there’s no reason they shouldn’t at least be splitting those 28 minutes.

    -  For all of this negativity, though, once again the Cavaliers came storming back from 20 down and had a shot at the buzzer that would have won the game. One major culprit was an old nemesis, the free throw line. The Cavs were 20-31 from the FT line (64.5%) and that’s the reason the comeback bid fell short. If the Cavaliers would just play their A Game (or even their B Game) defensively, they wouldn’t need to worry about FTs. But when you play down to your opponents and consistently let lesser teams battle with you down the stretch, those FTs suddenly become enormous. And it’s not Shaq (100%) or Jamison’s (100%) fault this time. Mo Williams was 2-5 from the line and LeBron was 7-13 from the line. Both missed crucial FTs in the 4th quarter.

    -  There are some major positives from this game (Mo’s overall play on offense, LeBron’s loaded output, and Delonte’s intangible timing on big momentum plays), but I’m not going to focus on them because I hope the team isn’t doing so either. My hope is that this game serves as a wake up call and snaps this team out of it. Having said that, I’m tired of writing like a broken record. I keep waiting for the Cavs to turn the Playoff switch on, but it’s not happening. They’re not in danger of losing to the Bulls. The Cavs can beat the Bulls on talent alone. You can’t say the same for the Celtics and/or Magic. Trouble is looming on the horizon for the Cavaliers.

    What The Internet Is Saying

    I am spitting mad right now. Remember how I used to say that you wanted these kind of games to happen in February? Well, now it’s the playoffs. I don’t buy the “wake-up call” thing either. This team got upset in the playoffs last season. Their best player is a free-agent this off-season. Boston had 2008. LA had last year. Orlando has the future. No team has more pressure on them than the Cavs do, and they’re acting like they don’t need to take every playoff game seriously.

    Like I said, if they run through the Bulls in the next two games, I’ll buy the “wake-up call” thing. Right now, all I see is a team that hasn’t won a playoff game on the road this season giving up a playoff game against a 41-41 team to put them three losses away from an unthinkable collapse. With LeBron scoring 38 points. If the Cavs don’t pull it off this season, this is the kind of game that will make LeBron look at his options. If that doesn’t make you terrified, I don’t know what will. [Cavs: The Blog – John Krolik]

    Instead of realizing that this was the Bulls’ last shot to make this a series and that they’d come out fighting for their season with the injection of energy playing at home, the Cavs eased into Game 3 like it was a game in February. They played at something less than full speed for three quarters and hoped it worked and then turn it up in the fourth quarter. Questionable as it is, it works in the regular season but it is a bad habit. Seeing the way the Bulls’ attacked and the Cavs literally fell over themselves — Anthony Parker back pedaled once and actually went to the deck playing passive defense on Derrick Rose — highlighted this perfectly.

    Perhaps this will serve as one of those “wake up” games that higher seeds sometimes need in the playoffs. It didn’t help that the Cavs played this same way in Game 2 and got away with playing a great quarter to win. That doesn’t work on the road, even against .500 teams. It must be assumed that Bulls’ non-stars will step up and have better games, that is what happens at home. Just look at what Jamario Moon did in Game 2.

    As the Cavs break down film and go over lineup situations and fine-tune the game plan, attitude is going to be just as important. They will have to arrive Sunday ready to play a playoff game. They did that in Game 1 and then talked about how their focus was sharpened and how Shaquille O’Neal was leading by example. All of us in the media lapped it up and it was easy because you could see that the Cavs had that edge. It was vanishing in Game 2 and it was gone in Game 3. [Plain Dealer – Brian Windhorst]

    Derrick Rose made 13-of-26 shots for 31 points and Kirk Hinrich hit 9-of-12 for 27 points Thursday night, resurrecting the Bulls’ hopes in this first-round series.

    Rose arrived averaging more than 25 points in the first two games. But Hinrich had scored a total of 13 points before Monday, making just six of 18 shots.

    But Parker knew Hinrich would be trouble when he made two of his first three shots in the first quarter. [Plain Dealer – Mary Schmitt Boyer]

    The Bulls for some reason took something away from Game 2 that they felt they could build on.  I wrote, and said during the Wine and Gold Podcast earlier today, that I didn’t know what those takeaways could be.  There wasn’t anything from an x and o standpoint that I could see the Bulls were particularly doing that the Cavaliers couldn’t adjust to.  The only thing that happened in Game 2 was, for a stretch, the Bulls just played harder than the Cavaliers.  If the Cavs just came out and played hard tonight for 48 minutes, that would’ve pretty much wrapped it up.  Only they didn’t.  Not once but twice they left their sense of urgency laying next to their ipods and twitter accounts in the locker room.  They allowed the Bulls to close the first quarter up 11, and got down by as many as 21 during the opening minutes of the third, and you can’t dig holes like that in the playoffs…no matter how many whistles go your way, or inbounds passes you execute properly. [Stepien Rules – Brendan Bowers]

    The Cavs weren’t at their best — 43.9 percent shooting and 20-of-31 from the line — but they got the requisite solid games from their top three players in LeBron James (39 points on 14-of-26 FG, 10 rebounds, eight assists, three blocks, two steals), Mo Williams (21 points on 5-of-11 from deep), and Antawn Jamison (19 points and 11 rebounds). The problem, as it usually is on the road in the playoffs, is that their secondary players were far worse. [The Baseline – Eric Freeman]

    Cleveland didn’t do themselves any favors with the way they started the game, as poor perimeter defense (Derrick Rose and Luol Deng were getting into the paint at will) and iffy shot selection gave Chicago a comfy lead. It was enough for the Bulls to ride their momentum through the second and third quarters before sealing the win at the line in the fourth. Not that the Bulls were spotless from the stripe when it counted; out of their eight free throw attempts in the final minute, Chicago made just four of them, leaving the door open for a potential tie on several occasions. [ProBasketballTalk – Rob Mahoney]

    And though James made shots, and his team shot 40% from 3, so the real issue for Cleveland wasn’t King James or his court, it was that they couldn’t stop the Bulls from scoring. The Bulls, of all teams! It was especially rough for the Cavs in the frontcourt, and it was highlighted in one sequence: old-ass Shaq blowing a dunk, and Noah beating him down the court on the other end for a layup. Varejao battled foul trouble all night, and the Cavs actually had their best success when they went without any bigs (Jamison and James as the frontcourt) and forced the Bulls with Noah on the bench (foul trouble of his own) to go without him or Brad Miller

    Cavaliers vs Bulls: Round One, Game Three Numbers and Words


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    April 2010 Issue –> Personal Article David Paul Doyle – Sharing the Voice of Love By: Chris Attwood  David Paul Doyle has been hearing and sharing God’s Voice since 1994. Having received life-changing communication and guidance from this Voice over a 10-year period, David Paul quit his job at America Online in 2003 and moved to Ashland, Oregon, to write a book that would teach people how to hear this Voice within them.In the summer of 2004, David Paul and his wife Candace completed writing their first book, The Voice for Love: Accessing Your Inner Wisdom To Fulfill Your Life’s Purpose. The night they finished writing it, they rocked back and forth on their front porch swing sharing their feelings of joy and gratitude for accomplishing their dream. For a few minutes, they felt a sense of completion and wholeness. It was during this moment of silence that they both suddenly turned to one another having realized that their work with God was only just beginning.Since that time, The Voice for Love has touch the lives of over 60,000 people worldwide. Over 10,000 people have learned the life-changing five-step process given to David Paul and Candace by the Holy Spirit for hearing God’s Voice within. CHRIS ATTWOOD: Will you describe for our listeners what you mean by “hearing the voice of God?”DAVID PAUL DOYLE: I believe that God is love, and so there are infinite ways to experience that love that we’re joined with, that we are, that God is. Yet, one really practical way is to actually be able to dialogue with that part of ourselves. We recognize that hearing God’s voice is much more than hearing words. At its essence, it’s just experiencing that truth of who we are.In that moment, regardless of what the form takes, we are “hearing God’s voice.” We’re receiving the awareness, the insight, the understanding of the truth, of the love that we are, and it can come in so many different ways. At the same time it can come and be experienced as a really wise loving, compassionate voice that can guide and support us in our lives.CHRIS ATTWOOD: Is hearing the voice of God the same as talking with God, or is it different?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: It depends on how you define ‘talking’. Some people would define ‘talking’ as talking to God. Prayer is oftentimes thought of as that, but that doesn’t always mean that someone is going to listen for God’s reply. ‘Hearing God’s voice’ we usually think of as both talking to God and hearing back from God in a really recognizable way. You could define talking to God as just a one-way thing, from me to the source or from me to God. Many people do that but don’t actually believe or allow themselves to receive those answers in reply. CHRIS ATTWOOD: Will you share with us what sort of things God says to you?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: Here’s the thing about hearing God’s voice, it’s always evolving. What I mean by that is that God speaks to us where we are; God doesn’t have agendas for us to be asking certain questions or to be receiving certain levels of truth. Wherever we are on a personal path or evolution of understanding, we receive messages right where we are in that moment, messages that we can understand, can digest.We can assimilate. Everybody is hearing different messages from God because what they need to hear is unique to them. What I’ve noticed over the past 15 years is it’s always the same core messages of love and truth and peace, and oneness; they’re always there. How they’re presented, or what I’m learning or working on, is really tailored to where I am in that moment in my life. Across the board, all of God’s messages are leading me deeper into the full-time awareness of my oneness with God and all that is, and the love and the connection that we all have together. Yet, it can be wrapped in very practical guidance. Frequently, probably most of the time before I start my day, I will meditate and ask God, “What shall we do together today?”What would be the best to focus on today? How should I spend my time?” A lot of times I create to-do lists with God to figure out what my priorities are and what I want to work on; or, I’m going through a tough time and I need to make some difficult decisions. I ask for insight and understanding about the pros and cons of doing certain things so I can make wise choices. Does that answer your question?CHRIS ATTWOOD: It does, and it sounds like you have developed a partnership relationship with God. It sounds as if God is deeply involved in what you’re doing, and that you treat God the way you might treat a partner. Is that true? DAVID PAUL DOYLE: Absolutely. That’s interesting that you bring up the partnership. You can’t really go wrong in having a relationship with God because God is always loving and supportive, no matter what. God can’t see that we make any mistakes at any time. God only sees the perfection of everything. At the same time, when we bring God into our awareness and have a partnership, it really helps us to feel confident, certain, not guilty when we make decisions, or not fearful about the decisions that we make.It just helps us to live a really peaceful, graceful experience of being in alignment with our heart’s desire and the greater good. CHRIS ATTWOOD: When you hear the voice of God, are you actually hearing a voice as you hear my voice, or is it more hearing thoughts or impressions? Talk to us a little bit about what the experience is of hearing the voice of God.DAVID PAUL DOYLE: It’s really all of the above. I think one of the things that throws people off the most is that they do expect to hear this big, loud voice. Even that expectation alone keeps most of us from it. That’s because implicit in that idea is that God is separate and outside of us, and so we’re listening for something that’s separate and outside of us. Because of that, we keep missing it.One of the techniques that we teach is how to join with that part of ourselves and express it through our own bodies, because the Holy Spirit will use the body as a communication device. Frequently, I’ll speak the voice out loud in order to hear it myself. It’s kind of like joining with that part of ourselves and then manifesting it in the world is what gives me the opportunity to hear it.Some people, many people, do hear it as an actual voice, like you said I would hear your voice. My wife certainly started hearing it that way in the beginning. What I find is that the longer people hear God’s voice, the more their awareness becomes integrated with God and that oneness, and that voice really becomes their own true voice, as opposed to a separate voice.CHRIS ATTWOOD: That’s so beautiful. What’s the relationship between hearing the voice of God and prayer? Are they the same thing, or are they different?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: There are probably many ways to see it that would all be valid, but we tend to use the word ‘prayer’ to mean talking to God, and any form of talking to God we would consider prayer. Again, you can pray, but not necessarily choose to hear God’s replies. We make the slight distinction that prayer opens the door to that dialog, but then we all need to take a moment to allow ourselves to receive God’s reply. You could call that meditation. You could call it hearing God’s voice. You can call it whatever you want, but it’s more of that two-way prayer to God, and meditation might be receiving from God.CHRIS ATTWOOD: Are there different ways to hear God’s voice, or does it always come [indiscernible]?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: No, there are probably six billion different ways to hear God’s voice, as many ways as there are people. I think some of the common ways-because the Holy Spirit will use everything about us as an opportunity to communicate-would be all the body senses. It could be visual. Some people are very visual, and they literally watch a movie in their mind or see images in their mind that are symbols and that hold all that communication, that knowledge, inside of them. You could literally ask for signs in the world while you’re walking around. It’s possible to feel all the answers. That was how I started out in the beginning. I loved to feel, so I would just feel God’s answers. It could be visual, it could be feeling, it could be kinesthetic, it could be auditory, it could be a thought in your mind, or you might even receive it as inspiration. There are really countless ways we can hear it. One of the things the Holy Spirit had me doing in the early years was to listen for this voice through everyone else. I was stuck hearing it through myself, but if I could perceive in my right mind, I could really start hearing that voice through people at work, through my bosses, while watching the news and the TV. This is because everything can be a communication from God if we have ears to hear.CHRIS ATTWOOD: In your experience, what is required for someone to be able to hear that voice? What is required for them to be able to be open to that?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: I think the biggest thing is just the desire. We can’t give ourselves anything if we aren’t willing and wanting to receive it. It’s the same with God. God can’t give us communication unless we want to receive it. Just a strong desire is probably the biggest thing. That’s really the only thing, and yet you could refine it a little bit more just to say getting into a quiet place really helped.Also, getting out of fear, judgment, and all of the ego’s thinking really helps to allow ourselves to receive it. I think our desires would make that happen, and yet I know I certainly had the desire for years, but I still had some subtle thoughts, concepts and beliefs in my mind that made it difficult for me to receive. Again, my desire pushed through all of those limitations at some point and made it happen.CHRIS ATTWOOD: In The Voice for Love you talk about how Jesus came to hear this voice of God within. Can you explain what you mean by that? How?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: Yes, without going into details, the Holy Spirit had talked to us that Jesus really went through the same process that we did. He had to, and it’s really related to desire. His desire to hear the Holy Spirit was so strong that over his lifetime it became the only thing he wanted and more important than everything else. It was really that returning to that desire over and over again, and making that so important that enabled him to hear that voice and only that voice. That didn’t come at an early age. It came over time with a lot of practice, discipline, and commitment to that desire of his. Once that was the only desire in his mind, it became the only voice he ever heard in that moment.CHRIS ATTWOOD: What I understand you to be saying is that possibility exists not just for Jesus, but for every person. Is that true?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: Absolutely. I think that’s really his message. In part, he said, “Greater works than these you will also do.” That’s essentially what he is saying, “I am your equal. I’m not over you. I’m literally a part of you, and I’m just showing you what’s possible for everybody and what’s inevitable.” We can’t really stop ourselves from deepening our experience of the truth and our oneness.This is because that’s where creation is going, whether we resist and kick along the way or we go joyfully. There’s only one way to go, and we’re all going there. It’s just a matter of time.CHRIS ATTWOOD: That’s kind of a relief, actually, isn’t it?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: It’s a little nicer when we go willingly, but we all kick and scream. We can’t help it. That’s what the ego loves to do, and we all do it.CHRIS ATTWOOD: You have a new book coming out that’s called When God Spoke to Me: The Inspiring Stories of Ordinary People Who Have Achieved Divine Guidance and Wisdom. Would you tell us a little bit about your new book, and what are some of the things we can expect when reading it?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: I’m so excited about this book because my passion, as you know, is to help as many people as possible to hear this voice. Four or five years ago, I was thinking, “What is an engaging mechanism or an engaging way to touch people, to inspire people, and to really get people interested in hearing God’s voice?” I had been meeting so many people while traveling around the country.People were coming up and telling me their stories, and there was just so much passion in it. I loved listening to them. I said, “What we really need is a story that just rocks people’s worlds, one that is a pleasure and a rollercoaster ride in and of itself, and yet simultaneously teaches people how to hear this voice and really gives them so much information along with a good read. I started collecting all these stories. It took me about three years to collect the stories, to edit them, and to work with the people. What was fascinating was that a lot of these people had never even told these stories before-or at least only a couple of people-and they needed some coaching. So often people would say, “I just heard this voice,” and I would say, “Tell me about it. How did it feel? What did it sound like? What did you perceive? “What were you going through in that moment? What was in you that had that shift happen?” It was really probing and pulling this profound wisdom out of their experience, so I’m just thrilled about this book. We’ve worked really hard to make these stories wonderful to read, and yet packed with as much juice as possible. I think it’s going to be so inspiring. There are people from all walks of life in this book: Atheists, Catholics, Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, people in prison, people with heroin addiction, those who’ve been divorced, those with cancer. It’s all over the board, and I think what it really shows is that God is everywhere and a part of everyone. It doesn’t matter what you believe, what you think, or what you do. It’s all there within us. I love that message and can’t wait have that message get out there and try to get rid of some of these lines that we all love to draw between each other. I don’t know if I answered your question or not.CHRIS ATTWOOD: You absolutely answered the question. Would you share a couple of the stories of people who have heard God’s voice and what impact it’s had on their lives.DAVID PAUL DOYLE: What I thought might be kind of fun is to read one of the stories. They are pretty short. They’re only about a page-and-a-half. What do you think about that? I thought it would be fun. I read this story to my daughter. I have an eight-year-old daughter, and I read this story to her. She clapped afterwards. It’s one of my favorite stories, too. Now, I’m not a professional story-reader so I’ll do the best I can, but this story is one of 70 stories in the book. In my opinion, all the stories are as good but this happens to be the first story in the book. Should I go for it?CHRIS ATTWOOD: Please.DAVID PAUL DOYLE: I’ll do my best here. It’s called “She is Mine.” “I was terrified, crying out to Him with all my heart. I couldn’t believe God was speaking to me, nor could I believe He would say this, ask this; not now. I grew up in a non-religious or spiritual home. We neither read the Bible nor attended church except for Easter Sunday. I began talking to God at 13 when I discovered my parents were not my biological parents.”It didn’t matter that I never heard a response from Him. He was my imaginary friend. At 26, I married and we had our only child 18 months later. Our daughter was hospitalized twice in her first 90 days with different forms of RSV and pneumonia. We struggled financially. While I worked two jobs my husband ran his own resume business so he could stay with our child during the day to prevent another bout of RSV.”The new business produced income but took all that it made to continue. We had no health insurance and no way to obtain any for a child who was hospitalized so early in life. Eight months after her birth, I was involved in a car accident and unable to work for months. I remember thinking, ‘My God, what’s next? Why are you punishing me?’ The stress was unbearable. “Times were excruciatingly difficult, and we were approaching financial disaster. For the first time I truly felt helpless, and real depression set in. One Sunday afternoon our child became suddenly very ill. Within 15 minutes she had changed from an active two-year-old playing with her toys to a lifeless form lying on our living room floor unable to keep anything down.”Her temperature was 102 degrees and climbing. My mom, who lived right behind me, told me to bring her over. We bathed her in cool water and swabbed her down with alcohol to reduce her fever, but still it soared. We gave her Tylenol, but the medicine wouldn’t stay down. Repeated messages left with her pediatrician’s answering service brought no replies. “As she lay on my mom’s floor I suddenly remembered a lady at work who was an Evangelical holy-roller. At their church they laid hands on each other and people were healed. The lady never explained how they did it, but it was worth trying. Crying and praying, I kneeled over my child, laid my hands upon her tiny back, and begged God to heal her. I promised God all kinds of things.”I begged for forgiveness. I even begged for her illness to be put upon me. My mother watched in amazement. The doctor finally called me back at 6:45 PM saying he had to call in a prescription to the local pharmacy. It closed at 7:00 PM, and was at least 15 minutes away. Driving down the road past the church where outdoor sermons were preached from a grounded boat each Sunday, I began to cry hysterically.”It hit me that my child could suffer brain damage or die from a high fever. I hated to leave her, but I had to get the medicine. Again, I begged God to heal her tiny innocent body. This time I was screaming it out loud in the car through the tears and mucus streaming down my face. It was then that I heard a firm but loving male voice. The loudness of it seemed to fill the van, but it also seemed to be just in my head.”I stopped breathing. ‘Will you give her to me?’ the voice asked. ‘What?’ I screamed. I gulped my first breath in seconds while wiping my eyes and nose on the sleeve of my shirt. I glanced around my van to see if someone had slowly somehow slipped inside. Again, the voice spoke loudly. Softer somehow, it asked again, ‘Will you give her to me?’ My mind spun in circles. Had I somehow slipped off the edge of reality?”This was a real possibility considering the stress I’d been under for the last few months. I began a series of small system checks: Am I driving? Yes. Is it evening? Yes. Is it Sunday? Yes. I even pinched myself on the arm to be sure I wasn’t dreaming or hallucinating, and that hurt. The voice waited patiently for me to process what was happening. ‘Will you give her to me?’ he asked. ‘How can you ask me that question?’ I screamed.”Are you trying to tell me it’s already too late? Have you already taken her and are preparing me so when I get home to my mom’s house and find she’s dead, I can cope with it? Why would you ask this of me?’ I felt so angry and scared that I actually pulled over in the grocery store parking lot and wondered if I should just go back home. I couldn’t stop shaking.”If God was taking my child and I headed back home right now, maybe I could spend the last few moments with her in my arms as she left this world and returned to him. As this last terrible thought crossed my mind, I realized that in truth she was already His. She was on loan to us from God. I cried so hard I nearly choked. As this reality sunk in, I whispered the answer through my tears.” ‘Yes, I will give her back to you if I must.’ It was the single most profound moment of my life. My heart was breaking. At the same time it was relieved because the fear had gone. I couldn’t lose what I didn’t possess. This was the first time since her birth that I fully realized that my little girl belonged not to me, but to her creator. As if he were right there listening to my thoughts, he said, ‘I created her. I breathed life into her. She is mine.’” ‘I understand,’ I responded sobbing. ‘I don’t want to lose her, Father, but I will give her back to you.’ ‘Well done, my good and faithful servant,’ he said quietly in the most loving voice I had ever heard. This startled me almost more than actually hearing the voice. ‘How can I be a good and faithful servant when I don’t even attend church regularly?’ The pharmacy was closed, and I arrived back at my mom’s house within 20 minutes.”Climbing the stairs, an indescribable surreal peace filled me. I knew I would open that door to find my mother hunched over my daughter’s lifeless body. I didn’t know how I would handle it. ‘Mama,’ my daughter said as she greeted me at the door. ‘I feel all better now.’ She had a big cup of juice in one hand and a cherry Popsicle in the other as she hugged my leg. She turned around and ran off to play.”It was as if she had never been sick at all. The fever was gone. Her appetite had returned as if nothing had happened. I glanced at my mom who was sitting in the armchair munching a Popsicle. ‘What happened to her, Mom?’ ‘I don’t know,’ Mom replied. ‘Her temperature shot up to 104 degrees right after you left. I couldn’t get her to wake up. I called for the ambulance.” ‘When I came back, she was sitting up and asking for something to drink. It happened about 20 minutes ago.’ What I learned that day changed me forever. God is real. I never needed to know that more in that moment he spoke to me. What I thought was mine never was. She is His. I was enough for God just the way I was. The End.”CHRIS ATTWOOD: Wow! That’s very powerful. What an amazing story. Thank you for sharing that with us.DAVID PAUL DOYLE: Yes, hopefully my reading was sufficient. That’s the type of story in this book. There are all kinds of different stories about hearing God’s voice in, literally, dozens of different ways. I counted up how many different ways are in the book; there are 44 different ways.CHRIS ATTWOOD: That’s amazing. How did you locate the people who had these stories?DAVID PAUL DOYLE: We locate people through our website. We get about 150 new people a day on our mailing list. We had a little link on our website that said, “Please submit your stories.” Over the course of about a year, we received over 350 stories.CHRIS ATTWOOD: That’s quite amazing. Is there any kind of common theme to those stories, or is every one unique, different?For details on how you can get the complete interview, including a transcript and recording… ==>Click HereFor more information about David Paul Doyle and his work, please go to TheVoiceForLove.com  

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    David Paul Doyle – Sharing the Voice of Love By: Chris Attwood


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