Category: Uncategorized

  • The Heavenly Helpline Chronicles

    Oops I did it again… apparently I’m high-maintenance

    So, I’ve got one more angelic encounter story for the books. Honestly, I’m think my guardian angels demand hazard pay.

    There’ve been countless times when I’m pretty sure heavenly help was involved—moments where things worked out just a little too perfectly. But unlike those subtle nudges from above, this story (like the two before it) involves a full-on, no-doubt-about-it angelic intervention.

    At this point, I imagine the leader of the angelic task force sighing deeply, rubbing his temples, and sending out yet another urgent memo: “Right team, she’s wandered into trouble again. Get your wings in gear—this one’s going to need backup.”

    I definitely keep them on their toes. Or clouds. Or whatever angels stand on.

    Heaven’s 911

    This next story takes place deep in the rolling green hills of the KZN Midlands.

    I was in my early 30s at the time—still single, still hopeful (mostly), and heading off for a much-needed weekend getaway in the Drakensberg Mountains. My travel buddy? Jane. Also single, newly divorced, and very much in need of mountain air, strong coffee, and possibly divine intervention.

    Jane and I had met at church, though technically she was my mom’s hairdresser first—someone I’d adopted after a particularly traumatic home perm situation. We bonded over the usual: heartbreak, horror dates, and how most decent men seemed to have gone extinct somewhere around 1996. Our shared survival of the dating scene in our 30s created a friendship forged in fire… and flat hair days.

    For our Drakensberg adventure, we decided to take my car—a shiny (well, sometimes dusty) little Mazda 323 that was still fairly new at the time. What could possibly go wrong, right?

    Now, if you’ve read any of my previous stories, you’re probably starting to notice a pattern: me + car trip = angel alert at Heaven’s emergency desk. I’m convinced the minute I put a key in the ignition, there’s a siren going off in the heavenly control room.

    “She’s on the road again, folks. Buckle up and grab the holy toolkit—this one’s gonna need us.”

    And sure enough, this trip didn’t disappoint.

    Angels, Mist, and One Very Unimpressed Cow

    It was around 6 p.m. when we veered off the N3 and onto the road to Underberg—a stretch of road that locals will tell you is less of a road and more of a real-life game of Taxi Chicken. It’s narrow, it’s winding, and apparently it comes with a built-in “death wish” mode for minibus drivers doing 120 km/h into oncoming traffic.

    As we hit that infamous road, the mist rolled in—thick, cold, and clingy. Autumn in the Midlands does that. One minute you’re driving, the next you’re starring in your own horror movie with a visibility rating of “LOL, good luck”.

    Naturally, I eased off the accelerator, dropping to a cautious 70 km/h while Jane and I muttered hopeful prayers that no taxis would try anything dramatic. We had literally just said, “Let’s hope no one does a kamikaze overtake,” when things took a turn. (A literal one.)

    I rounded a bend—and there it was.

    Out of the swirling mist emerged a massive cow. Not walking. Not crossing. Just standing. Sideways. Right in the middle of our lane like it was contemplating life, chewing its cud, and couldn’t care less about Mazda-shaped problems.

    I did what every panicked driver instinctively does: I slammed the brakes. (Mistake number one.) Because, surprise, mist and tar make an excellent slip-and-slide combo.

    Everything slowed down like I was suddenly in The Matrix: Midlands Edition. I saw Jane brace for impact. I felt the car start to slide. And I watched in helpless, high-definition horror as we drifted straight into the bovine blockade.

    There was no dramatic swerve. No movie-style dodge. Just the cold, slippery truth of physics. We hit the cow.

    Straight on.

    And then it slowly slid up the hood of my car. In that surreal moment, I actually had a thought:

    “I’m about to have a whole lot of fillet on my lap.

    Moo-ving Toward Impact

    We’d heard the stories. Everyone in the Midlands knows someone—or knows someone who knows someone—who hit an animal with their car and didn’t walk away from it. So as the cow slid up my bonnet in cinematic slow motion, a wave of cold dread hit me harder than the actual impact.

    My brain was spiraling. Was this it? Was this the bizarre, mist-covered end of my life story? “She lived, she loved, and then she lost a high-speed showdown with a cow.” It was terrifying.

    Miraculously, the cow stopped sliding just short of my windscreen. But then—like a final dramatic move in a bovine ballet—its head and legs flopped over, leaving a massive dent in my roof and side panels. And then, as if following some invisible director’s cue, the cow slowly slid off the car and onto the road with an undignified thud.

    All I could see was the front of my once-proud little Mazda now crumpled like a used napkin. We sat there frozen. Time felt weird. It might’ve been five minutes… it was probably more like five seconds. Silence hung thick in the mist.

    Eventually, I snapped out of it just long enough to register that my car had come to a full stop—on the wrong side of the road.

    Facing oncoming traffic.

    Had anyone else been barreling around that corner like the taxis were earlier, we’d have had a full-speed head-on collision with a cow acting as a grotesque bumper.

    Then we heard it.

    Mooing. Loud. Pained. Drawn-out.

    The cow was very much alive—and not at all happy about its impromptu ride on my car. Jane, ever the tender-hearted vegetarian, immediately covered her ears and began whisper-praying on repeat:
    “Please, Lord, don’t let the cow die. Please don’t let the cow die. Please, please don’t let the cow die…”

    Meanwhile, I stared at the front of my poor, crumpled Mazda—hood folded, bumper gone, headlights blinking in confusion—and I’ll be honest: I wasn’t praying for the cow’s survival. In that moment, after all the damage it had done, I was lowkey hoping for slow internal bleeding. I know that’s terrible, but so was the dent in my roof.

    Then Heaven Sent a Land Cruiser

    Just as we were about to peel ourselves out of the car, headlights cut through the mist behind us. A large Land Cruiser pulled up—one of those big, rugged ones that look like they’ve driven through battlefields and Sunday braais alike. I assumed it was a group of local farmers. From what I could see, there were two guys in the front and three standing casually on the back like it was a khaki-clad chariot.

    They all jumped out in one fluid motion, like some kind of Midlands SWAT team.

    The driver and one of the guys came straight to my door, opened it without hesitation, and gently helped me out. Two more did the same for Jane. The last one jogged to the front of the car and crouched near the cow, giving it a once-over like a vet-slash-cow-whisperer.

    “Hey,” I heard him call out, “we might need the gun—she’s in bad shape.”

    Jane immediately gasped. Her vegetarian heart just about gave out. I, on the other hand, was still in shock and had just about resigned myself to my car being declared a total write-off—possibly by insurance, definitely by God.

    Once we’d convinced these rugged, handsome khaki angels that we were physically fine (emotionally? Debatable), one of them suggested we move the car out of the oncoming lane before we added more trauma to the evening.

    Two of the guys sprinted in opposite directions to flag down traffic, waving their arms and moving with military precision. Where I’d been stuck in slow motion just moments before, these guys were operating on fast-forward—like bushveld paramedics with a soft spot for damsels and livestock.

    I never actually saw a gun, but I was bracing for the worst. Then, just as the mist seemed to swallow the road around us, another shape emerged from the fog.

    A second cow.

    It walked calmly toward its injured friend, leaned in, and licked her ear.

    And just like that, the mooing stopped.

    As if on cue, the “injured” cow stood up—possibly out of embarrassment—and the two of them trotted off together into the field, vanishing like ghost cows into the mist. It was surreal. Jane, nearly in tears from relief, waved them off like long-lost friends, beaming with joy.
    “No one had to die tonight!” she exclaimed.

    Wheels, Winks, and One Last Moo-ving Moment

    Now that the cow had miraculously walked off and the Mazda was safely back on the correct side of the road, one of our rugged, khaki-clad angels turned to me and asked, “Do you want to try start your car?”

    Honestly, I didn’t think it had it in her. But I climbed in, turned the key… and she started first time. Like nothing had happened. As if we hadn’t just body-slammed half a ton of livestock.

    The driver of the Land Cruiser leaned in and said, “We’ll follow you the rest of the way to your resort, just to make sure you’re alright.”

    I blinked. “Are you sure? It’s still quite a way to go.”

    He just nodded, calm and confident. “We’ll follow.”

    And that was that.

    So off we went, creeping along at a respectful speed—slow enough to make sure the wheels didn’t fall off, fast enough not to look like a parade float. I was still high on adrenaline and disbelief. Jane, on the other hand, had shifted gears completely.

    “Why,” she hissed, “did I not hand one of them my business card? What was I thinking?!”

    I mean, fair question. How often do you get rescued by five handsome farmer-types in coordinated khaki?

    We reached the driveway of our resort, headlights bouncing gently off the gravel path, the mist still curling around us like a scene out of Outlander (minus the kilts, plus cows). As we pulled in, our guardian farmers gave a final hoot, a cheerful wave…

    …and then vanished back into the mist.

    Just like that.

    No names. No numbers. No Tinder follow-ups. Just a rescue, a goodbye, and a convoy of angels with bakkie boots.

    Gone—but never forgotten.

    Khaki-Clad Angels and the Road to Safety

    As I said at the start of this story, I’ve found myself in more situations than I can count where I know angels were working overtime behind the scenes. But on that misty Midlands road, I truly believe those khaki-clad heroes weren’t just good-hearted local farmers. They were honest-to-heaven angels—sent to pull us out of a potentially deadly encounter and see us safely to the end of our journey.

    Their timing. Their calm. Their quiet confidence. It all felt too perfectly placed to be coincidence.

    Sometimes, divine intervention shows up in a blinding light. Other times, it arrives in a Land Cruiser, wearing boots and a warm smile.

    “For He will order His angels to protect you wherever you go.”
    Psalm 91:11 (NLT)

  • Stranded, Scared, and Saved: My Night on the Concrete Highway

    One of my previous posts was about another angelic encounter that helped me in a dire situation. This is another account of what can only be described as angelic intervention.

    Stranded on the Highway With a Broken Fuel Gauge and a Barefoot Stranger

    Buying my first car felt like winning a mini lottery—okay, more like finding a crumpled R50 note in your jeans. It was secondhand, scratched, and smelled vaguely like old sandwiches, but it was mine. No more relying on my boyfriend for rides like I was his clingy little co-pilot. I could go where I wanted, when I wanted. Independence never looked so… slightly dented.

    The dream, however, came with one tiny, catastrophic flaw: the petrol gauge didn’t work.

    Since I couldn’t afford to fix it (or really fix anything), I adopted the “human calculator” approach. I tracked my mileage like my life depended on it—because, apparently, it did. I’d drive until I thought it was time to refuel, then top up just before things got dicey. It wasn’t ideal, but hey, it worked.

    Until it didn’t.


    Enter: A Wednesday Night Disaster

    It started with dinner at my boyfriend’s mom’s house—classic midweek visit that began fashionably late because he just had to hit the gym after work. I left around 10 p.m., cruising onto Joburg’s shiny new “concrete highway,” which, back in the 90s, was still novel and exciting. Fast lanes. Fewer robots. What could go wrong?

    As I headed uphill, the car gave a little judder. Then another. And then it started coughing like it had swallowed a spoon. My stomach dropped. I had forgotten to check the mileage.

    I was out of petrol.

    I somehow managed to steer into the emergency lane, pulling off like a Formula 1 driver who just realized they were out of fuel—and also had no pit crew. The engine died. The lights dimmed. And just like that, I was alone. On the side of one of Joburg’s most notorious roads. At night.

    This particular stretch had a reputation: carjackings, assaults, fake “help” lures that ended in horror. I knew the stories. Everyone did. My heart pounded so loudly I could hear it over the passing traffic.


    Fight, Flight, or… Wave Pathetically?

    I had three options, none good:

    1. Stay in the car and hope no one bothered me. (Unlikely.)
    2. Walk home. (Alone. In the dark. Nope.)
    3. Flag someone down and pray they weren’t a serial killer.

    I chose option 3, mostly because it didn’t involve movement. I got out and stood next to my car, arms folded like I was waiting for a taxi that would never come. Cars flew past, their headlights slicing through the night, not even slowing down. Twenty minutes went by. Nothing.

    Eventually, I raised my arms and started waving like one of those inflatable things outside a used car dealership. Another 15 minutes. Still nothing. My arms went limp. I was tired, scared, and dangerously close to tears.

    So I did what any desperate 90s Joburg girl might do in that moment: I whispered a prayer.

    “Please, God. Help me.”

    To be honest, I wasn’t even sure He was still taking my calls. But before I could spiral further into self-doubt, something happened.

    A white VW Jetta pulled up.


    The Barefoot Miracle

    A young man stepped out, dressed entirely in white—shorts and a shirt—and, bizarrely, no shoes. He looked calm, relaxed, like a guy who mistook a highway emergency for a beach stroll.

    “Are you alright? Can I help you?” he asked.

    “Yes! Please!” I blurted, explaining my fuel faux pas. Midway through my rambling confession, I realized I had no money on me. None. Not even a crumpled R2.

    He frowned a little. “Oh dear,” he said, like we’d just run out of biscuits at teatime. “I don’t have money on me either.”

    Then he casually walked to his car, dug into the ashtray, and emerged with a handful of copper coins. Maybe enough to buy half a loaf of bread—on special. “Let’s see what we can do,” he said. “I’ll take you to the petrol station.”

    I got into his car without hesitation. Normally, my self-preservation instincts would’ve kicked in. But in that moment, I felt totally safe. He was shorter than me, which for some strange reason reassured me. No weird vibes. No ulterior motives. Just… calm.


    Faith, Fumes, and a Jerry Can

    At the petrol station, the attendants scrambled to find a container small enough to justify the pocket change. Eventually, we filled up with whatever fuel we could afford and headed back.

    On the drive, we talked. Not small talk—real talk. He asked about my life. I found myself opening up to him, like he was an old friend I just hadn’t met yet.

    When we got back to my car, we poured in the fuel. I turned the key, hoping for a miracle.

    Nothing.

    The car didn’t even cough.

    I felt my whole body sag. But he wasn’t fazed.

    “Alright,” he said gently, “let me take you home. You can sort it all out in the morning.”


    Grace in a White Jetta

    I didn’t hesitate. I didn’t even think about the fact that I was letting a barefoot stranger drive me home in the middle of the night. That’s how safe he made me feel.

    On the way, I nervously joked about my car being stolen or stripped. He just smiled. “It won’t be,” he said, like he knew something I didn’t.

    He dropped me off, wished me well, and drove off into the night. No numbers exchanged. No dramatic farewell. Just gone.


    Looking Back

    It took me a while to process what happened that night. But the more I reflect, the more I believe that man wasn’t just some helpful stranger. The odds of a barefoot guy in white pulling over, having just enough coins, and making me feel totally safe?

    That’s not luck.

    That’s grace.

    In a city as wild and unpredictable as Johannesburg, on a night that could’ve gone horribly wrong, I was protected. Delivered. Helped by someone who showed up out of nowhere, with nothing, and gave me everything I needed in that moment.

    “For He will command His angels in regard to you, to protect and defend and guard you in all your ways.” – Psalm 91:11

  • Loved Like Mary: A Moment in the Garden at St. Dominic’s

    This morning, I find myself sitting quietly in the garden at St. Dominic’s Home for the Aged in Houston, Texas. It’s a sacred little oasis—a place where time seems to slow just enough for the soul to catch its breath. The paths are lined with statues of Mary, her expression soft and maternal, and there are kneeling benches scattered among the flowers, inviting passersby to pause and pray. It’s a garden made for reflection—built for hearts seeking comfort, clarity, and connection with the divine.

    As I sat on one of those benches with my Bible open and the soft rustle of leaves above me, I felt a tender whisper in my heart—one I believe came from the Lord Himself.

    “I love you as much as I love My mother.”

    The words stopped me.

    They were too weighty to rush past, too beautiful to disregard. I sat in stillness, letting them wash over me, and found myself contemplating the mystery and mercy of such a love.

    Mary—blessed, chosen, revered—was entrusted with the sacred role of bringing Jesus into the world. She was obedient, humble, and full of grace. And yet, she was also fully human. Not divine. Not a part of the Godhead. But a willing vessel.

    It occurred to me: if God could use her humanity—her ordinary earthly existence—for such an extraordinary purpose, how much more might He desire to use mine now that I carry the Holy Spirit within me?

    It’s a thought that might raise eyebrows in some circles, particularly among those who deeply venerate Mary, and I mean no disrespect. In fact, sitting among the statues and symbols honoring her here in the garden, I feel only peace. I understand why people pray to her—it’s not unlike talking to our own mothers. A gesture of affection, familiarity, and trust.

    But the deeper revelation that settled in my soul today is this: Jesus doesn’t love me less than He loves Mary. He loves me just as much. And the plans He has for me—even in this later season of life—are not lesser than the plan He had for her. They are simply different. Still sacred. Still meaningful. Still full of eternal weight.

    In the stillness of this garden, surrounded by symbols of Mary’s faithfulness and the echoes of prayers whispered through decades, I feel more aware than ever of how much I am seen, known, and loved by the Lord.

    And if you’re reading this today, I hope you remember that too.

    He loves you just as much as He loves her.

    Let that truth sink deep.

  • Angels in TJ: The Night I Got Lost in Mexico and Was Found by Grace

    Some stories are too wild to be fiction — and too full of grace to be coincidence.

    This is one of them.

    It’s a true story from a chapter of my life I’ve never forgotten — a night I found myself alone, lost in the chaos of Tijuana, Mexico in 1986, without a passport, a plan, or anyone to call. What started as a carefree Friday night ended in fear, prayer, and an encounter that still gives me chills.

    I believe in angels. Not the kind with harps and halos, but the kind who walk in denim and white shirts, speak peace into panic, and show up right when heaven hears your cry.

    This is the story of how I got lost — and how God sent help when I needed it most.

    Angels at the Border Checkpoint

    The Missionary and the Miracle

    David Livingstone, the great Scottish missionary and explorer, once recounted a chilling moment during his travels through Africa. A local tribal chief had planned to kill him and his companions that night. But mysteriously, the attack never happened. Much later, that same chief confessed to Livingstone that he had indeed come to murder them — but he and his men had seen 39 armed warriors encircling Livingstone’s camp, and out of fear, turned back.

    Livingstone was stunned. He had no guards. But when he later shared this story at his home church in Scotland, one of the members stood up and said, “That night, 39 of us were praying for you.”

    That story has always moved me — not just because of the divine protection it reveals, but because I too once found myself in danger, and I too was rescued in a way that felt nothing short of miraculous.

    My brush with the supernatural happened one wild Friday night in Tijuana, Mexico.

    Laundry Room Encounter

    It all started one Saturday, shortly after moving into my new apartment. The building had a laundry room, and I figured I’d get a load done like a responsible adult.

    I walked in and immediately froze in the doorway. Standing there, bent over a machine in a pair of baggies, was what looked like a walking surf ad—sun-bleached scruffy hair, broad muscly shoulders, and then, when he turned around, the bluest eyes I had ever seen outside of a perfume commercial.

    “Hey, how are you!” he said with a big California grin.

    We started chatting—about South Africa (my accent gave me away), Durban (he was weirdly excited about the apparently world-famous weed), and life in general.

    Before I knew it, we were perched on top of the machines like old friends, folding laundry and swapping life stories. Then he asked, “Have you ever been to TJ?”

    I had in fact been to Tijuana with my cousin and some friends one Saturday. It was also a good two hour drive down to the Mexican town on the US/Mexico border.

    “NO but have you been at night?”, he asked.

    I said I hadn’t and so he said “You must come with me on Friday?”

    Uh-Oh

    And despite the fact that I had a fiancé back home, I said, “OK.” (Don’t judge me—I was young, curious, and clearly dazzled by surfer charisma.)

    I was warned

    My cousin, with whom I was staying at the time, was a little horrified and nervous. South Africans were not allowed in Mexico because of the sanctions against South Africa because of apartheid. I convinced him that this guy would look after me.

    The night finally arrived!

    Friday night finally rolled around, and I was a bundle of nerves and excitement. This was it — my date with surfer-dude! I carefully selected my outfit, which, in hindsight, screamed “young Christian girl from the suburbs trying to look worldly.”

    I wore a purple pencil skirt (lovingly sewn by my fiancé’s mother back in South Africa, bless her misguided heart), a white blouse, my best white “Princess Di” pumps — and to top it off, a permed 80s bouffant so voluminous it needed its own seatbelt. Honestly, I looked like I was going to a church tea party in 1985. Which, to be fair, and considering this was 1986, was sort of my fashion inspiration.

    My cousin, suspicious and slightly overprotective, declared he’d be present to inspect surfer-dude upon arrival. Probably hoping he could telepathically shame me out of going.

    The doorbell rang and my heart did a backflip. I sat on the couch facing away from the door while my cousin opened it. I could only see my cousin’s face — which instantly drained of color, like he’d just seen a ghost, or worse, a tax inspector.

    I thought, Wow! He must be as smitten with surfer-dude’s good looks as I am!

    Then surfer-dude walked in.

    Dear Reader, I too turned ghost white.

    Gone was the sun-kissed, beach-blond Adonis from the laundry room. In his place stood Billy Idol’s rebellious second cousin — the one who got kicked out of punk band practice for being too extreme.

    His once tousled blonde beach hair was now sculpted into a Mohawk so sharp it could slice bread. A giant black lightning bolt was painted across one cheek like a tribal tattoo from the Book of Bad Decisions. His ears sparkled — not from jewelry, but from a full runway of safety pins marching up both sides like tiny metallic centipedes.

    He wore a black leather jacket covered in studs and chains (because zippers are for the emotionally stable), skintight leather pants that looked like they’d been applied with oil, and heavy black boots with silver studs that could tenderize a rump roast just by looking at it.

    I sat there blinking like someone who’d just opened the door to Narnia and found out it was hosting a biker convention.

    My cousin stared at me. With VERY big eyes.

    I stared at my cousin. We both silently screamed, Abort mission!

    But the words never came.

    So I grabbed my handbag, hitched up my mother-in-law-made skirt, and followed Punk Rock Armageddon out the door like this was the most normal Friday night ever.

    Driving to Mexico

    We climbed into his large red pickup truck — a vehicle so big I needed a small trampoline just to get into it. As we cruised south toward the border, I began to relax. Miraculously, Billy Idol’s persona had disappeared and Surfer-Dude was back. He was charming again, chatty, me trying very hard not to notice that my date looked like he’d crawled out of a Mad Max sequel.

    He told me, with the enthusiasm of a Labrador puppy, that we’d be meeting up with his friend “Doc,” who, according to him, was an incredible dancer. I imagined some sleek, salsa-swinging, Patrick Swayze-type character. In my mind, I was now the lucky girl about to be flung gracefully between two rhythmically gifted men like the rose between two very funky thorns.

    We arrived in Tijuana and, miraculously, found parking close to the border. That in itself should have been a sign from heaven — or perhaps a warning. The gates were flung wide open like Disneyland for college kids—if Disneyland had tequila.

    You see, in Mexico, the legal drinking age is 18. Combine that with cheap tequila and no parental supervision, and voilà — welcome to TJ: the official training ground for tomorrow’s hangovers.

    We joined the crowd, and I did my best to look worldly and unbothered, despite being wrapped in a homemade skirt and clutching my tiny handbag like it contained nuclear codes. We passed rows of Mexican vendors enthusiastically grilling “sausages” on makeshift grills over little roadside fires.

    Now, if you weren’t paying close attention, it all smelled delightfully meaty and vaguely adventurous. But I had been previously warned by fellow South Africans: do not, under any circumstances, eat the sausages. Unless, of course, you’d always dreamed of biting into a well-dressed rodent marinated in motor oil and mystery.

    So I smiled politely, kept my nose in the air, and power-walked past the “ratwurst” brigade.

    The street soon transformed into what Americans affectionately call The Golden Mile — a stretch of clubs, lights, music, and regret waiting to happen. It was a neon-lit buffet of bad decisions, and we were about to dive right in.

    And honestly, at this point, I still thought we were just going out dancing.

    We weaved through the crowd like salmon swimming upstream, eventually arriving at a dingy staircase that led to what I assumed was a club. Up the dark stairs we went, and boom — we were on the dance floor.

    When he spoke about Doc earlier, I naturally had pictured a chill surfer type with sun-bleached hair and maybe a backwards cap.

    Not even close.

    Out of the fog machine haze and frantic strobe lighting emerged a towering Black man who looked like a cross between Mr. Clean and a tribal warrior from the future. He was bald, except for a single, determined plait of hair that sprouted from the middle of his forehead and swung with purpose like it had its own personality.

    Dancing with Doc!

    Doc gave a brief nod — a silent “yo” — and then jerked his head toward the dance floor like a general leading his troops into battle.

    Now let me set the stage: the extent of my dance background was performing ABBA routines in a friend’s living room to impress her parents. I was more “Dancing Queen” than “dance floor queen,” but I figured — how hard could this be?

    Well.

    Turns out, Doc and my Billy Idol lookalike had moves that could only be described as interpretive martial arts. Arms were flailing like spaghetti in a wind tunnel, legs were kicking like caffeinated can-can dancers, and Doc’s head was bobbing up and down so violently that his hair-plait had turned into an actual whip. I swear it whistled when it sliced through the air.

    It was chaos. It was wild. It was… apparently mesmerizing.

    Before I knew it, the dance floor had cleared around us like we were breakdance royalty. A human circle had formed, and I — Heaven help me — was in the middle of it. People were watching. People were cheering. I was becoming part of the floor show.

    And friends, I was not ready to be a floor show.

    Unable to take the spotlight (or the fear of being decapitated by Doc’s hair-whip) any longer, I frantically motioned to my date that I needed a bathroom break. I think he got the message — or he thought I was doing interpretive mime. Either way, off I scuttled.

    Now, if you’ve never used a club bathroom in Tijuana, count your blessings. This one was… an experience. Imagine a horror movie bathroom, but add graffiti, no toilet paper, and a smell that could singe your eyelashes. I did what I had to do, avoided making eye contact with the mirror (because I think it blinked at me), and returned to the dance floor — mentally prepared to be whipped into oblivion once again.

    Except… they were gone.

    Vanished. Poof. No Billy Idol. No Doc. No plait.

    Alone in the Golden Mile

    Just me. Alone. In TJ. In a purple pencil skirt. I began to walk around the club, trying to find them. I wandered and wandered, and after half an hour, fear started to gnaw at the pit of my stomach. I worried they had gone to another club and left me behind. I searched the club for another fifteen minutes before looking for them at other clubs.

    Back on the street, I did what every good Christian girl abandoned by her Billy Idol date in Mexico does: I wandered up and down the Golden Mile like a confused tourist who’d taken a wrong turn on the way to Bible study. This infamous stretch was bursting at the seams with clubs, restaurants, and an alarming number of establishments advertising things that I’m pretty sure my mother would need prayer counseling just to read out loud.

    I probably got halfway down the Golden Mile before realizing it was getting late. All the establishments were beginning to empty as the teenagers headed back to the American side of the border before midnight.

    I became increasingly panicked as I contemplated what I would do without a passport to get back into America. The streets were emptying quickly as the Americans re-entered their own country. A few local Mexican street vendors were leering at me muttering spicy remarks in Spanish that need translating to me blush seeing I was clearly out of my depth in my little purple pencil skirt and white shirt. I wandered around with a completely bewildered look on my face.

    I tried to find the first club where we started the evening and where I lost my date and Doc. But by now, every door and doorway to a club looked the same. I tried one, but it wasn’t the right place. I looked around and eventually realized that I wouldn’t find them on this side of the border.

    Lost and deserted in TJ

    So, without a clue what to do next, I started the walk back to the border post. By now, the streets were completely empty except for a few American stragglers still making their way through the border gates. I stood there, looking at the border post, frozen in terror and utterly unsure of what to do next.

    The only thing that came to mind was to pray the only prayer I could think of in my panic – the Lord’s Prayer. So, under my breath, I began, “Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be your name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven…….”

    As I stood there, once again glued to the floor and silently praying the Lord’s Prayer, a man’s voice behind me said, “Hey, are you OK?” I turned around and saw two young men, possibly in their early twenties, wearing white shirts and blue jeans. Because they were dressed the same, I thought they might have been waiters at a restaurant or bar or something.

    I was about to explain that nothing was okay—but instead, I burst into tears. One of the young men stepped forward gently and asked, “Hey, how can we help you?” Through broken sentences, between sniffs and tears, I told them I was South African. I explained that I had come on a date, but he had deserted me. I told them that I been searching for him for hours, and now I had no idea how to get back into the United States because I didn’t have my passport.

    One of them looked at me with quiet confidence and said, “Don’t worry. We’ll help you.” There was no hesitation. No judgement. Just calm, steady reassurance from two strangers who seemed to know exactly what to do.

    Without fuss, he laid out a simple plan. We would walk together toward the border post. He would go first, I would follow, and his friend would come last. As each of us passed through the gate, we’d say just one word: “States.” He’d say it first, I’d echo it, and then the friend behind me would say it last. It was a code of sorts—something the border control officials recognized as a sign that we were American teenagers returning from a night out.

    It was a fragile plan, but in that moment, it felt like grace.

    Once again, I found myself placing my trust in the hands of complete strangers. But this time, instead of fear, I felt an unexpected and overwhelming peace. Just knowing someone was willing to help, lifted the weight that had been pressing on my chest all night.

    My heart was POUNDING as we approached the turnstiles at the border post. We moved forward exactly as planned. The first guy stepped up and said, “States.” And went through the turnstile. I followed with my own quiet, “States.” Then the friend behind me echoed it. Just like that, without hesitation or question, we were through.

    Saved by a wing and a prayer

    And before I could fully take in what had happened—I was back on American soil.

    I can’t remember what we talked about as we walked back toward the car—maybe the adrenaline was still too high, or maybe I was simply too relieved to care. But there it was: my date’s red pickup truck, parked exactly where we had left it hours earlier.

    I pointed it out, and one of the guys asked, “Well, do you want us to take you home?”

    I shook my head. “No, I’ll just wait in his truck.”

    As much as I appreciated their kindness, I didn’t want to press my luck. I knew Billy Idol hadn’t crossed back through the border yet, so I figured it was safest to wait for him there.

    I found the truck unlocked, climbed in, and locked the doors behind me. I sat there for a while before finally lying back on the seat, completely overwrought and exhausted. Before long, I drifted off to sleep.

    I don’t know how long I’d been asleep when I heard the driver’s door open and my date’s voice: “Oh, there you are.”

    By then, I was furious. I can’t remember exactly what was said, but he offered some excuse about he and Doc having stayed in that first club the entire time I’d been searching for them in the streets of Mexico. I argued, insisting I had searched that club thoroughly before venturing out.

    Despite it all, the ride home was quiet. All I felt was relief that I’d live to tell the story another day.

    Here’s the thing about that night—something I only discovered years later. While I was lost, bewildered, and alone, searching for my date and Doc, my mom was at her desk during the day in South Africa when she suddenly felt a strong impression in her spirit that something was wrong. She felt a tightening around her heart and knew she needed to pray for me. She and my dad began to pray fervently in the spirit on my behalf.

    I honestly believe those two young men who appeared out of nowhere, when everyone else had vanished, were angels sent to guide me out of a potentially life-threatening situation—just like the 39 angels who protected David Livingstone.

    That night showed me just how powerful prayer can be, especially the prayers of a parent. Even though my mom was thousands of miles away, working quietly at her desk, her spirit was deeply connected to mine. Her prayers, filled with love and desperation, crossed oceans and time zones to surround me with protection when I felt utterly lost. It’s a beautiful and humbling reminder that no matter where we are, the prayers of those who love us can be a lifeline, a shield, and a source of hope when we need it most.

    I often think back to that night in Mexico—the fear, the loneliness, the panic that clutched at my chest like a vice. But then I remember the peace that followed. It came not from logic or planning, but from something deeper, unseen. It came with two young men who appeared just when hope seemed lost. They didn’t have wings or halos. They didn’t shine or sing. But they knew exactly what to do. And I knew—deep down—that they weren’t just any strangers. They were sent.

    Scripture tells us that God commands His angels concerning us, to guard us in all our ways (Psalm 91:11). I believe in that promise. Not just as poetry or metaphor—but as a living, breathing truth. Angels may not always look like the stained-glass images we’ve grown up seeing, but they’re real. They move when we call out to God. They show up when there’s no one else left. They walk beside us, unseen but present, especially when danger closes in and we are at our weakest.

    That night, I didn’t just get rescued. I was protected. Covered. Surrounded by grace I could not see, but could absolutely feel. And I believe it was the prayers of my parents—tuned to heaven—that moved God’s hand to send help. When we pray, especially when we pray for our children, we invite heaven to stand guard. We unleash angels to fight battles we can’t even see. And sometimes, they show up in denim and white shirts, speaking peace and guiding us home.

  • As Far as the East Is from the West: Letting Go of Shame

    The Lie the Enemy Keeps Telling Me

    Yesterday, I was reminded afresh of something I did nearly 40 years ago that I deeply regret. And once again, I allowed the enemy to whisper lies into my mind—reminding me why I wasn’t worthy of love or attention. I’ve spent a lifetime believing that I wasn’t enough. A lifetime of trying to please people in the vain hope that they would accept me. So much of my life has been marked by feelings of condemnation, judgment, and rejection.

    I could probably come up with a hundred reasons why I became this way or how it all started. But what disappoints me most is that even now, as an almost 60-year-old woman, I am still so affected by these things.

    Shame’s Echo Across the Years

    I’ve been the kind of person who, by the world’s standards, would be labeled an overthinker—constantly analyzing how people see me, whether they accept or reject me.

    And by Christian standards, I’d be seen as someone who struggles to take every thought captive. I believe much of this stems from my formative years in a church where I heard a gospel that said: “Yes, God loves you enough to die for you—but if you sin, He will turn His face from you and punish you.”

    That teaching was further solidified at home. Though I know now that my parents loved me, back then their own unhealed wounds caused them to reinforce a message of performance-based love. When I messed up, the punishment never fit the crime. Each incident left me drenched in shame, and from that place of shame, I began my relentless quest to earn love and acceptance.

    Over time, shame became the lens through which I viewed myself and my world. One painful event piled upon another, building a mountain of guilt and embarrassment. And the event I mentioned earlier still haunts me—forty years later.

    The Relationships That Reflected My Pain

    There have been so many rejections. But perhaps they weren’t all others’ fault—I had unhealthy expectations. I was never just “me” in a friendship; I was always striving to be the perfect friend, and still, I felt like I never measured up.
    Again, not their fault.
    Mine.
    I didn’t know how to just be.

    When it came to romantic relationships, I was always drawn to the wrong kind of man. Looking back, I realize it probably had a lot to do with my own low self-esteem. I craved validation, and I believed that if a good-looking man was interested in me, it somehow proved that I was attractive—that I had value. But time and again, those relationships ended in betrayal. The truth is, I was choosing people based on how they could affirm me, not how they could love me. And maybe it’s no surprise that none of those connections were healthy. Because if I couldn’t love and accept myself—the person God created me to be—how could I ever expect someone else to?

    As Far as the East is from the West

    But when does the bleeding stop?

    I don’t want to still be affected by something foolish I did 40 years ago. Jesus came to deal with that very thing on the cross—and in His eyes, it’s already gone. “As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us” (Psalm 103:12). By refusing to forgive myself, I’m the one keeping myself locked in a prison of shame, handing the enemy the key.

    I recently read an excerpt from Shaping Your Future by Barry Bennett:

    “Your future consists of thoughts, words, and actions that have yet to be expressed. You can allow your heart to be a warehouse for the past—hurts, anger, offenses, failures, and memories—or it can be a factory of faith for the future… In your heart reside the issues of life.”

    Shame, as Brené Brown describes it, is the voice that tells us we’re not just wrong—we are wrong. It convinces us that we are unworthy of love and belonging, and it locks us into the pain of our past. Shame thrives in secrecy and silence, but when we bring it into the light and speak it with honesty and vulnerability, it loses its grip.

    As Brené says,

    “If you put shame in a Petri dish, it needs secrecy, silence, and judgment to grow. But if you douse it with empathy, it can’t survive.”

    Naming our shame and offering ourselves compassion is the first step to healing.

    The Truth That’s Setting Me Free

    At the end of the day, no matter how many times I’ve let myself or others down, I know this:

    there is One who loves me and accepts me exactly as I am.

    And He says I am more than enough.

    That One is Jesus.

    I choose to forgive myself.
    I choose to please Him only.

    And in Him, I am enough.

  • Murky Waters and Manatee Whiskers : An Unexpected Encounter

    Just had the most unforgettable weekend with my amazing girl cousins — all from my mom’s side of the family, and all forever etched into my heart. There really aren’t enough words to capture the beauty of what we shared: the laughter that bubbled up from deep places, the tears that reminded us of our shared journey, the endless conversations, and the kind of soul-nourishing fellowship that only comes when you’re with your own.

    One cousin flew in all the way from Vancouver, while the rest of us — two near Tampa, one in Daytona, and me in Ocala — met in the heart of Florida at a hidden gem called Crystal Springs. It was the perfect backdrop for something we’d dreamed of doing together: swimming with the gentle, majestic manatees.

    The swimming-with-manatees experience turned out to be slightly different than the dreamy, crystal-clear underwater ballet I had imagined. Every spring I’d visited before had water so clear you could spot a fish rolling its eyes at you from 20 feet away. So, naturally, I expected something similar—maybe even a graceful underwater photo with a manatee photobombing in the background like a sleepy potato.

    But oh no. Not today.

    I will say, the tour company was top notch. They took one look at each of us—like some kind of wetsuit sommeliers—and handed us wetsuits that fit so perfectly I briefly considered inviting mine to Thanksgiving dinner. Things were off to a good start.

    Then we got to the spot. The boat slowed down, and instead of some grave-faced guide delivering a solemn speech about respecting wildlife, ours was cracking jokes like it was open mic night. “Alright ladies,” she grinned, “this is where the magic happens—and by magic, I mean where the manatees turn the river into a giant salad bowl.” She had a punchline for everything, and somehow managed to make algae sound like an exciting feature.

    We peered over the edge, and instead of the sparkling blue spring water I had envisioned, we were greeted with what can only be described as slightly soupy guacamole. Apparently, manatees enjoy redecorating the riverbed by churning up grass and sediment as they eat, creating that authentic manatee mist vibe.

    Splendid.

    With great caution (and even greater bladder control), I slid into the green abyss, heart pounding, wetsuit suctioning itself to me like a second skin. I couldn’t see more than a foot in front of me, and that’s when my imagination, unhelpful as ever, decided it was the perfect moment to cue the theme from Jaws. You know, da-dum… da-dum… Only, instead of a great white shark, it was a half-ton sea potato with flippers and a salad addiction.

    We had been firmly told: “Do NOT touch the manatees.” Which, I thought, was perfectly reasonable until you’re suddenly floating next to something the size of a reclining La-Z-Boy that could brush up against you at any moment and send your soul directly to Jesus.

    I tried to stay calm, but the combination of cold water, nerves, and a rogue underwater leaf brushing my leg nearly made my bladder file for early release. I floated, frozen, trying to look calm and reverent, while internally praying, negotiating, and humming worship songs in case this was the day I met my watery end.

    We were each handed a pool noodle—as if this neon-colored foam was the only thing standing between us and being swallowed whole by a curious sea cow. The instructions were clear: float flat, stay calm, don’t kick, and most importantly, stay near the tour guide, who—despite the murky water and zero visibility—somehow knew exactly where these giant river potatoes were lurking. She had a sixth sense, like some kind of manatee whisperer. I’m convinced she could hear underwater vibrations or perhaps communicate with them telepathically.

    As we floated in formation like very confused aquatic ducklings, weird squealing noises began erupting around me. Not manatees—humans. Apparently, some of the others were getting lucky with close encounters. Meanwhile, I was just trying not to hyperventilate into my snorkel. I couldn’t see a thing… but every now and then, just on the edge of my vision, I’d catch a slow, speckled shadow gliding beneath me—like a couch-sized submarine silently plotting its next move.

    Then it happened.

    Out of nowhere, something grabbed my foot. I nearly evacuated every organ in my body. My brain immediately flashed to the story of Jonah—except this time, I was the one about to be swallowed whole by a sea beast for reasons I hadn’t quite figured out yet. I braced myself for the slow journey into the belly of a giant, aquatic creature, fully expecting to be spat out somewhere near Tampa two days later, slightly pickled and forever changed.

    Just as I was preparing to repent for whatever had led me to this moment, I heard laughter.

    It was my cousin.

    Floating smugly behind me, she had decided it was the perfect time to test the strength of my sphincter—and our relationship.

    By this point, my back was absolutely screaming from all the stiff, noodle-assisted floating. I wasn’t alone—my equally tall cousin was also quietly dying from the awkward “hover like a sea otter” position and had made a wise, dignified exit back onto the boat. She was now observing the murky madness from above, squealing with delight every time a manatee surfaced like it was SeaWorld meets spa day. Clearly, she was having a much better time from her dry, upright position than I was marinating in swamp soup.

    So I made the executive decision to abandon my noble underwater post and join her. I was halfway through my dramatic retreat when our ever-joking, all-knowing tour guide spotted me attempting my dignified exit. She suggested I take just one more look. Before I could protest, she was right next to me, gently guiding me by the shoulders like some sort of mystical snorkel guru. “Just put your face in right here,” she whispered, pointing to a very specific patch of greenish nothingness.

    I did as I was told—lowered my face into the water—and there it was.

    Right there in front of me, filling my entire goggle lens like a potato-shaped angel, was the tiniest, most adorable manatee you could imagine. It was chewing thoughtfully on the rope that anchored the boat, looking as if it had been born to star in a Pixar movie. And then—oh my heart—as if it knew I had come just for this moment, it turned ever so gently toward me, glided up, and brushed its soft, whiskery, leathery nose against my cheek.

    And then… it blew in my ear.

    I kid you not, it exhaled a little puff of warm, manatee breath straight into my ear canal. It was equal parts magical, bizarre, and faintly unsettling. But I’ll tell you this—it was a moment. The only thing I could compare it to was the day the doctors lifted my baby girl from my stomach and introduced me to her for the very first time. That same “everything else fades away” feeling. Pure, unexpected joy.

    The whole experience—though completely different from what I had pictured in my imagination—was something deeply precious. A memory wrapped in laughter, murky water, and manatee breath, forever etched in our cousin storybook. It may not have been the serene underwater fairytale I’d envisioned, but it became something far better: real, unexpected, shared. One of those odd, slightly ridiculous moments you talk about over and over again for years to come—laughing harder each time you tell it.

    My cousins and I before “going under”….
    The sweet little potato before coming to blow in my ear…
    The little face that I’m sure held a smile…
  • 🧶 About Me – Tales from the Tangled Trail

    Hello and welcome, fellow wanderer and yarn-lover!

    I’m the voice (and the hands!) behind Tales from the Tangled Trail — a little corner of the internet where crochet meets chaos, and the road to adventure is paved with knotted yarn, tangled travel tales, and good intentions.

    I’ve lived through more than a few adventures — some hilarious, some horrific, and many somewhere in between — and I’ve finally decided to start telling them. This blog is where I’ll share those wild, wonderful stories from my past, and the new ones still waiting for me just around the next bend.

    When I’m not getting lost (on purpose or by accident), you’ll find me happily hooking away at my latest crochet project. I make tote bags, blankets, toys, and cozy things galore — each piece handmade with love, intention, and probably a little travel daydreaming. My goal is to sell my creations to help fund future adventures, while also bringing a bit of warmth, beauty, and handmade joy into other people’s lives.

    So if you like:

    • Stories that make you laugh and cringe
    • Handmade treasures with a story behind every stitch
    • A little inspiration to follow your own tangled trail…

    You’ve found the right blog. Let’s unravel this journey together. 🧳🧵