Altaire Clinic is excited to announce that they will now be providing their world-class health and beauty services to the residents of Moorhead, MN. This expansion means that more people will have access to the high-quality care and treatment options offered by Altaire. With a team of experienced healthcare professionals in the industry…
NewsBSA Claims Service is delighted to announce that their annual Platinum Level sponsorship of the Verisk Elevate 2022 conference will is helping to support the on demand viewing of the sessions of the conference currently available on the event website…
NewsThe Chiropractic Doctors of Grand Rapids, one of the fastest-growing Chiropractic companies in Michigan, are thrilled to announce the expansion of their service area to include the city of Cascade, MI…
NewsLas Vegas NV – GCS Glass and Mirror, one of the fastest-growing providers of custom glass installations, mirrors and glass doors, is delighted to announce that they are now opening a store in Las Vegas NV. The new address of the store will be 6401 Bristol Way…
NewsLas Vegas NV – GCS Glass and Mirror, one of the fastest-growing providers of custom glass installations, mirrors and glass doors, is delighted to announce that they are now opening a store in Las Vegas NV. The new address of the store will be 6401 Bristol Way…
If you’re always on the go, it’s likely that at some point in time you will need a place to get rid of your spare items. With the mission to lessen litter and keep communities clean, Redbox+ has launched a campaign offering affordable waste management solutions…
NewsIf you’re always on the go, it’s likely that at some point in time you will need a place to get rid of your spare items. With the mission to lessen litter and keep communities clean, Redbox+ has launched a campaign offering affordable waste management solutions…
Bentonville AR – BBB Septic Solutions, a locally owned and operated company based in Bentonville, Arkansas, is delighted to announce that they are in the final stages of developing their own clean water farm for the purpose of pollution control. As with all septic solutions companies…
NewsBentonville AR – BBB Septic Solutions, a locally owned and operated company based in Bentonville, Arkansas, is delighted to announce that they are in the final stages of developing their own clean water farm for the purpose of pollution control. As with all septic solutions companies…
Redbox+ dumpster rental in Fort Myers FL has been the dumpster rental of choice for many construction sites in the Fort Myers, FL area. The company prides itself on being able to provide dumpsters of all sizes and shapes for any need. Whether you are a homeowner looking to get rid of some junk or…
NewsRedbox+ dumpster rental in Fort Myers FL has been the dumpster rental of choice for many construction sites in the Fort Myers, FL area. The company prides itself on being able to provide dumpsters of all sizes and shapes for any need. Whether you are a homeowner looking to get rid of some junk or a contractor who needs dumpsters for a large construction project…
BNG Payments has released a comprehensive guide on how ACH payments work. The company, which specializes in making it easy for merchants to accept credit and debit cards, mobile payments, e-commerce, eCheck, or ACH payments, has spent the last few years researching and developing their knowledge of this type of transaction…
NewsBNG Payments has released a comprehensive guide on how ACH payments work. The company, which specializes in making it easy for merchants to accept credit and debit cards, mobile payments, e-commerce, eCheck, or ACH payments, has spent the last few years researching and developing their knowledge of this type of transaction…
Looking back on the first week of virtual school, I can truthfully say our experience has been less than smooth. We have granddaughters in first and second grades, and to say it’s been a difficult week would be like saying Stone Mountain was a little piece of granite. There have been daily tantrums and stomping…
NewsLooking back on the first week of virtual school, I can truthfully say our experience has been less than smooth. We have granddaughters in first and second grades, and to say it’s been a difficult week would be like saying Stone Mountain was a little piece of granite.
There have been daily tantrums and stomping around our basement classroom, the pulling out of one’s hair, and even fits of crying. Lots and lots of crying due to the frustration of not being able to understand the modern technology others seem to so easily comprehend. The stress has left us drained at the end of each day, not knowing how we will make it through the next.
But enough about me.
Let’s see if any of our difficulties are like the ones you and your children have faced in this week of virtual school.
First, I have to say our difficulties have not been due to any failing on the part of the teachers we’ve been in contact with. Teachers have been asked to do an impossible lift in this pandemic we all find ourselves in, and they have been unbelievable in their adaptations of the virtual classroom.
After meeting in a carpool line, the teachers gave us Chrome Book computers, bags of paper, notebooks, pencils, glue sticks, rulers, and a minute-by-minute schedule of the school day. We drove away with everything we needed for a successful year — except an understanding of how to use the programs preloaded on the Chrome Books.
Important note to frustrated home schooling readers out there: slamming the Chrome Book shut will not help you to understand the assignment just given your first- or second-grader. But it will prompt them to say, “Papa, you told us not to say those words.”
First, the minute-by-minute daily schedule doesn’t always work. Because of security reasons, users must log on twice, find their class, log on once again, and only then they can join the class. If your Chrome Book mic isn’t muted, it causes a loud feedback everyone can hear. And, I found out, if your mic isn’t muted everyone in the class can hear what you are saying about how impossible the minute-by minute schedule is to follow.
Second, schedules are different for each grade level. This, of course, isn’t a problem for parents with just one child, but for those of us with more than one, it makes the day extremely difficult. They have different log-in times for each class they take. Lunch times and recess aren’t at the same time either. Can’t send a first- or second-grader outside to play by themselves while we sit inside navigating the computer, now can we?
Third, even though not really “new” math: feedback, loss connection and frozen teachers do all add up to equal one big problem. One of the biggest problems with virtual school is everyone is doing it. The system gets overloaded and we get dropped, and sometimes the teacher’s screen freezes, or they disappear altogether.
It’s not their fault; the system just can’t handle all the traffic. Still, when it happens, the minute-by-minute schedule goes out the window, which puts even more pressure on everyone.
Fourth, simple assignments aren’t so simple if you don’t know how to use the programs. Little One’s second-grade teacher gave her an assignment to make a presentation all about stars. They could use any of the three programs that were loaded on their Chrome Books — all three of which Big Papa here didn’t have a clue how to use.
Luckily for us she gave the class one additional option. Students could draw pictures and then tell a story about each star. Since telling stories is something I’m good at, I provided a little advice (something else The Wife says I’m good at). Little One got a 100 on her stellar story about stars.
And finally, what’s the most important lesson we’ve learned by the end of this first week? It’s better to be here than there. Virtual school may be a difficult change for the very young and the not-so-young, but at least it’s survivable.
Seems at our granddaughters’ school, teachers have already gotten sick, and they are the only ones in the building. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all of them along with wishes for speedy recoveries.
Hopefully when you return, your students will soon, also. I know of a little first- and second-grader who are eagerly waiting for their morning teacher hugs.
[Rick Ryckeley has been writing stories since 2001. To read more of Rick’s stories, visit his blog: storiesbyrick.wordpress.com.]
Tyler’s 23rd birthday is tomorrow. If some Christian producer wished to make a movie about a young man completely sold out to God, confident in his faith, always willing to be a positive witness, and one who demonstrated his relationship with Jesus in his life, he need look no further. Tyler always believed in God…
NewsTyler’s 23rd birthday is tomorrow. If some Christian producer wished to make a movie about a young man completely sold out to God, confident in his faith, always willing to be a positive witness, and one who demonstrated his relationship with Jesus in his life, he need look no further.
Tyler always believed in God somehow. Oh, he had the positive influence of a Christian mom and others but, in the teen years, even the most dedicated tend to go through a crisis of faith. His came early.
It was in the 4th grade when he began to question the existence of God. Was there a God? Are we created by him or are we just accidents of the universe? Typical, even at that young age, he decided to investigate and analyze.
He acquired the book, “The Lie,” by Australian Ken Hamm and, reading it, concluded that God was real indeed. He never looked back and never wavered nor faltered after that. His faith was cemented and kept growing. From that time his heart was fully committed.
A believer in creation, as opposed to evolution, in the 6th grade he was troubled by a teacher’s emphasis on evolution as a fact, not a theory. Having developed a firm opinion on the matter, Tyler debated the teacher. In a short time, his mother, Janece Risty, was called to the principal’s office.
The teacher was complaining that he spent so much time debating Tyler that he was getting farther and farther behind in his lesson plan. The solution was offered: Tyler would stay in the office for the remainder of the teaching and, in return, would be given an “A.”
Tyler asked for more — he requested permission to start an after-school club for students interested in studying about creation. He received it and a group of about half a dozen students met together regularly.
There would be a price to pay. Six classmates, who looked unfavorably on Tyler’s open Christianity, took it upon themselves to mercilessly bully young Tyler. Finding their courage in the mob, the boys continually punched him and pummeled him at school. It was when they cornered him at school with a box cutter and told him they would kill him the next day that he was removed from the public school and placed in a private one.
In Lynchburg, Va., he began to blossom. He was athletic and played sports, especially football. While a high school freshman, he became a member of “Skiers and Snowboarders for Christ,” and competed in snowboarding competitions. He took up playing the guitar and, unusual for a boy his age, took an interest in the “Rat Pack,” an informal group of entertainers from 1955, and he especially enjoyed the music of Frank Sinatra. He was a good student and labeled “super-smart” by his mother.
His sophomore year began at Northgate High School in Coweta County, Ga., after the family relocated. Tyler continued to live out his faith. In the mornings before school, he would read the New Testament for half an hour. At school, he would invite students to come early to school for Bible study. At night, in addition to school work, he would find time to spend another half hour in the Old Testament.
Mother and son attended Dogwood Church in Peachtree City and, in 2013, were baptized together. Tyler was also involved in the youth group at South Metro Ministries in Coweta County and was a participant in two additional Bible studies. He also hosted a monthly group at his home.
A teacher sent his mother an email sharing how it was a joy to have Tyler as a student. She said that he was always preaching his faith in Christ through English writing assignments which he would then volunteer to read.
Again, his open faith would carry with it a price. He was threatened by so-called tough guys in the school who threatened at lunch time to “Fhim up.” Tyler’s response was to pray for his tormentors and skip lunch altogether for the rest of the year and study in the library. He didn’t hold grudges, didn’t become angry. He simply shared with his mother that, “They just need Jesus.”
Girls liked Tyler. For one thing, he was wickedly handsome and, for another, he respected them. He believed in boundaries, including the boundary of no sex before marriage. Girls were safe with Tyler. Ironically, Tyler’s plans for the future did not include being a minister. He had designs on being a mechanical engineer. At one point he expressed interest in working for NASA.
On December 21, 2013 Tyler had a dream in which he was on an operating room table surrounded by doctors working around his head. Then, he saw himself on a mountain top with Jesus standing next to him pointing into the valley. His aunt, Angela Northrop, had the very same dream. In the aunt’s dream, Jesus took Tyler’s hand and together they ascended.
It was on July 21, 2014, while at home with a girlfriend, that a massive headache sent him to the ground and triggered a seizure. He told his girlfriend, “Call Mom.” The ambulance and the hospital followed. Nine days later, Tyler Gabriel Liebl, age 16, was dead from a massive brain bleed.
Tyler died on a Wednesday. That evening, the youth at South Metro Ministries held a memorial service for the young man who was so much a part of their lives. During an altar call some 30 teens committed their lives to Christ. The funeral service, days later, was held at a standing room-only Christ the King Church. Other young people made a commitment there, too.
In the days that followed, Janece found even more evidence of Tyler’s faith in a diary, in notes left in his Bible, and in letters he wrote to God. In these letters were prayers that he prayed for the bullies, questions that he had, and praises that he offered. Every letter to God was signed: “Love, your son, Tyler.”
Through the miracle of modern medicine, Tyler’s life of sacrifice continued with organ donations. Twenty-three people had their lives saved or impacted by Tyler’s organs. Seventeen-year old Lance Frye of Irwin, Penn., was the recipient of Tyler’s heart. Janece became quite close with Lance and his family which resulted in visits to Pennsylvania and reciprocal visits to Georgia. The two families vacationed together.
One of the most meaningful gifts Lance gave to Tyler’s mom was a teddy bear. When she squeezed the paw, the toy would emit a heartbeat. It was a recording of Tyler’s heart now beating in Lance’s chest.
A few years later, Lance was diagnosed with cancer. Janece visited him and his family in Erwin, Penn. When things got worse, she stayed with him in the hospital when Lance’s parents needed some recovery time. She prayed with him and, upon returning home, prayed with him every night on the telephone. Just before Christmas 2018, Lance died. He was 21 years old, having been given an extra four years by Tyler’s heart.
Tyler had a dog, a female boxer named Brigeta, called, for short, “Bree.” To this day, when the paw of the bear is squeezed, Bree hurries to the bear and lies down on it, her head near the beating heart.
Tyler Libel would have been 23. It is said that the only thing one really leaves behind, our only true legacy, how we continue to live on, is in our family and in the influence we have had on other people. If this be Tyler’s measure, then, truly, he lives. He lives.
[David Epps is the Rector of the Cathedral of Christ the King (www.ctk.life). During the crisis, the church is live streaming at 10:00 a.m. on Sundays at http://www.facebook.com/cctksharpsburg/ He is the bishop of the Diocese of the Mid-South He may contacted at davidepps@ctk.life.]
Al Gilbert Alvin Freeman Gilbert passed away on August 24th, 2020. Al was born July 2, 1944 to Carl and Dorris Gilbert and spent his childhood in Newnan, Georgia. He was a 1962 graduate of Newnan High School and a 1966 graduate of the University of Georgia. He worked in the building supply industry and…
NewsMighty Dog Roofing comes to Southwest Houston, the roofing company’s latest market looking to make a difference in homes and businesses. Southwest Houston – Mighty Dog Roofing is announcing they’re now expanding into the Southwest Houston area and are offering professional roofing company in Southwest Houston …
NewsMighty Dog Roofing comes to Southwest Houston, the roofing company’s latest market looking to make a difference in homes and businesses.
Southwest Houston – Mighty Dog Roofing is announcing they’re now expanding into the Southwest Houston area and are offering professional roofing company in Southwest Houston …
Pensacola FL: HIP, an acknowledged leader in the Orthodontics Digital Marketing niche, is highlighting the fact that for a digital marketing campaign to be a success, it requires an excellent partnership between the client and the digital marketing company. Both companies need to be working towards the same goal…
NewsPensacola FL: HIP, an acknowledged leader in the Orthodontics Digital Marketing niche, is highlighting the fact that for a digital marketing campaign to be a success, it requires an excellent partnership between the client and the digital marketing company. Both companies need to be working towards the same goal…