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    A Time To...


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    Reviewers’ Comments about A TIME TO…

      “The best, most original book I have read in years. A TIME TO... is captivating right from the beginning. The author’s use of words draws readers directly into the story and captivates their interest by making them feel as if they were there... Overall A TIME TO... is well written, relatable and well thought out. I would highly recommend it.” — Michelle Danko, Faith Filled Family Magazine

      “A GREAT new spiritual book! I have had very little time for discretionary reading these days, so when I not only read a book, but call it a page turner, that ought to say something. That is precisely what I would call A TIME TO... The message is one that ought to resonate with every man, woman, and child.” — Rutherford Cardinal Johnson, Anglo-Catholic News Service

      “Thousands of deaths make it easy to not see individual stories within those thousands — A TIME TO... A Baby Boomer’s Spiritual Adventures — is a novel powered by a memoir as Ronald Louis Peterson tells the story of an individual who embraced the second half of the twentieth century and found spirituality and life through it all, before facing the tragedy of 9/11. A TIME TO... is a thoughtful read.” — Able Greenspan, Midwest Book Review

      “If you enjoy exploring issues of trust, faith and hope, A TIME TO... will provide you with many hours of reading pleasure… In the end, the purpose of even the most difficult events of the protagonist’s life becomes clear, as he chooses to respond with faith rather than bitterness, and compassion rather than revenge. I enjoyed reading this book, and my soft heart was melted to tears more than once.” — Shaeri Richards, Dancing with your Dragon author

      “A TIME TO... is not a book merely to entertain. It is a book that could provide a healing venue for those who lost loved ones on September 11 and the days afterward. Al Masterson represents all the victims of this tragedy… I highly recommend this book to readers who enjoy a well-written novel intertwined with historical facts.” — Tannia E. Ortiz-Lopés (catholicfiction.net) and publisher of https://timewithtannia.tripod.com

      “A ‘Must Read’ for Peace Corps Volunteers, Past and Present. Al’s Peace Corps experiences in Ethiopia evoke particular memories and life lessons learned for this former Peace Corps volunteer… the old but true adage that material things don’t equal happiness; that we need to give back; that life isn’t always fair; that we should always try to look at the “big picture”; that taking risks can cause the discovery of unknown talents; that smiles can equal an “international currency”; that it is so important to “listen to your soul”; and many more. — Barbara Henkin, Peace Corps Volunteer (Jamaica, 1969 - 71)

      “A TIME TO... is quite the pleasant surprise. Not your typical 9/11 tale, this story takes you on a personal journey to rediscover the best qualities of humanity — a great juxtaposition to see how one of the darkest tragedies in history can serve as the backdrop for some of the most beautiful examples of what makes life worth living. A great read.” — Lauren Staniszewski

      A TIME TO...

      A Baby Boomer’s Spiritual Adventures

      A Novel by

      Ronald Louis Peterson

      Copyright © 2008 Ronald Louis Peterson

      All rights reserved.

      ISBN: 978-1-4524-3127-7

      https://www.ronaldlouispeterson.blogspot.com

      Table of Contents

      Reviews

      Dedication

      Prologue

      Chapter 1 - A New Day

      Chapter 2 - Ode to the City

      Chapter 3 - News, News, News

      Chapter 4 - A Dream ... A Cartoon ... and God

      Chapter 5 - Why Risk It?

      Chapter 6 - One Small World

      Chapter 7 - The Bag Lady

      Chapter 8 - Not Just Another Day

      Chapter 9 - An Historic News Day

      Chapter 10 - A Journey through Hell Interrupted

      Chapter 11 - Childhood Memories

      Chapter 12 - School Bullies

      Chapter 13 - Magical Dad

      Chapter 14 - Dad to the Rescue

      Chapter 15 - Parent-Teacher Conference

      Chapter 16 - The Dysfunctional Teacher

      Chapter 17 - The Good Teacher

      Chapter 18 - Mature Spirits

      Chapter 19 - Ahhh, Coney Island

      Chapter 20 - Spook-A-Rama

      Chapter 21 - The Fortune Teller

      Chapter 22 - Imagination

      Chapter 23 - A Special Gift

      Chapter 24 - A Missing Father

      Chapter 25 - The Awkward Years

      Chapter 26 - Follow the Leader

      Chapter 27 - The Peacemaker

      Chapter 28 - Dying to Live

      Chapter 29 - The Hell Gate Treasure

      Chapter 30 - Man, What a Body!

      Chapter 31 - A Big Misunderstanding

      Chapter 32 - The Road to Manhood

      Chapter 33 - Bumping Into an Old Foe

      Chapter 34 - Aiding the Enemy

      Chapter 35 - Blood, Good Numbers, and Valuable Coins

      Chapter 36 - Betting Against Yourself

      Chapter 37 - Betting on the Big Game

      Chapter 38 - The Game Within a Game

      Chapter 39 - True Friends to the End

      Chapter 40 - Losing Faith

      Chapter 41 - A Concerned Son

      Chapter 42 - Another Place ... Another Time

      Chapter 43 - So Many Questions

      Chapter 44 - Searching for Answers

      Chapter 45 - The Wise One Speaks

      Chapter 46 - A Lack of Faith

      Chapter 47 - The Cost of Living

      Chapter 48 - Political Turmoil

      Chapter 49 - The Shoeshine Boy

      Chapter 50 - Cross-Cultural Training

      Chapter 51 - Food for Thought

      Chapter 52 - Metaphors Galore

      Chapter 53 - The Greater Challenge

      Chapter 54 - Self-Discovery

      Chapter 55 - Shadows and Light

      Chapter 56 - Special Bread

      Chapter 57 - Money Isn’t Everything

      Chapter 58 - Leveling the Playing Field

      Chapter 59 - First Day on the Job

      Chapter 60 - A Mysterious Request

      Chapter 61 - Mistaken Identity

      Chapter 62 - Trick or Treat

      Chapter 63 - God’s Voice of Love

      Chapter 64 - New Beginnings

      Chapter 65 - A Ghost of a Chance

      Chapter 66 - News Flash

      Chapter 67 - The Crooked Chiropractor

      Chapter 68 - Realigning the Chiropractor

      Chapter 69 - One Good Turn Deserves …

      Chapter 70 - Marathon: Going the Distance

      Chapter 71 - Tic Toc ... Tic Toc

      Chapter 72 - Twisting the Truth

      Chapter 73 - Revealing the Truth

      Chapter 74 - Making Peace with Himself

      Chapter 75 - Truths and Lies

      Chapter 76 - Good-bye Dairy Land

      Chapter 77 - Hello Top-Twenty

      Chapter 78 - The Name of the Game

      Chapter 79 - Packaging

      Chapter 80 - The Road of Good Intentions

      Chapter 81 - Pick Up! It’s The Cosmos on Line 5

      Chapter 82 - Psychic Powers

      Chapter 83 - Psychic Journey

      Chapter 84 - What’s Wrong with This Picture?

      Chapter 85 - In The Name Of ...

      Chapter 86 - God? No Way!

      Chapter 87 - Watch Your Back!

      Chapter 88 - Taking a New Road

      Chapter 89 - Al Finds Himself at the Zoo

      Chapter 90 - Spinning For Fun and Profit

      Chapter 91 - Public Relations at Work

      Chapter 92 - Memory Enhancement

      Chapter 93 - One Mystery Solved

      Chapter 94 - From One Mystery to Another

      Chapter 95 - Love
    Survives

      Chapter 96 - Faith Survives

      Chapter 97 - Hope Survives

      Chapter 98 - Answered Prayer

      Chapter 99 - Together Again

      Chapter 100 - Deciphering the Truth

      Chapter 101 - Charity Survives

      Epilogue

      Dedication

      I know that for some 9/11 was a turning point in their lives; but, for others, it was just another day.

      This story is dedicated to those who, like me, were deeply touched by the events that took place on that beautiful fall morning—especially families and friends who lost loved ones and those who have called New York City home at some time in their lives. As a New Yorker by birth— who has since lived in other cities, states and countries—it will remain a day that forever changed the way I look at life in general and my life in particular.

      May the rest of your days be at least a little brighter in some way after reading A TIME TO….

      Ronald Louis Peterson

      Prologue

      Like the lives of people everywhere in the world, the life of Al Masterson, a fifty-year-old risk manager in New York City, unfolded day by day to the rhythms of the people, places, and circumstances around him. He was good at adapting to whatever came up, but at times he found himself wondering, “Who am I really?” Even at fifty, to his amazement, he still wondered if his destiny and his reality were in sync. This was one of those days.

      It’s been a difficult question to answer because he had only vague ideas about his special or unique gifts. Sure, there were times when he had insights, but they didn’t last because something came up to challenge them and he lost his sense of self once again. In spite of the setbacks, he was confident that one day all the right circumstances would arise and then he would live the rest of his life in complete harmony with himself and everyone else in the world. Until then, he just maintained, as he was doing with his shaky employment situation.

      CHAPTER 1

      A New Day

      Al awoke at 5:30 a.m. on September 11, 2001, to the Byrd’s song Turn! Turn! Turn! playing on his CD alarm clock.

      “To everything— turn, turn, turn. There is a season— turn, turn, turn; and a time to every purpose under heaven. A time to be born, a time to die …”

      He liked the song for its strong, driving rhythm, its rich harmonies, and, most of all, its lyrics for their depiction of life as a series of events and emotions that define us at any given moment— each balanced with its opposite: “A time to be born, a time to die.” They were comforting because they told him that if he was suffering, something good would follow: “Turn, turn, turn.” They were disconcerting because they reminded him that the good times don’t last: “Turn, turn, turn.”

      So as he dressed and got ready to begin work on this day, he wondered if it would be the day that he’d lose his job, like the sixty others at his company who had been terminated in downsizing moves over the past few months. While there was no indication that his job was on the line, he remembered what those who had lost their jobs had told him as they cleared their desks, “Didn’t see this coming.”

      “Honey, just think … by this time tomorrow we’ll still be sleeping in a hotel overlooking a beautiful beach in Mexico,” said Helen, his wife, spiritual advisor and confidante, as he kissed her good-bye. When the world closed in on him and attacked his spirit, she was there to reconnect him with the One who could do something about it.

      “Yes. Just need to get through today,” he replied with the same anticipation that she had expressed in her voice. “I need to tie up a few lose ends at the office,” he added, not wanting to ruin the thought for her with his job loss concerns.

      CHAPTER 2

      Ode to the City

      There was no way to really describe New York City and do it justice. It had too much history squeezed into its three-hundred-plus years. Lots of cities were older, but few had evolved at its pace. Its metabolism was off the charts. Living life in the fast lane, that was NYC. Take any aspect of life. NYC sped it up. It was as if time-lapse photography condensed the life-cycle of just about everything and everyone in the city. Institutions like Wall Street and Broadway, which measured the nation’s business and cultural developments, were cases in point.

      The ebbs and flows of business were documented minute-by-minute with the flailing arms, hands, and fingers of traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. The marquees on Broadway theaters lived weeks, maybe months, before being replaced by the next show, the next hit. The same could be said to one degree or another of most institutions in NYC, and by default, those served by them. In this world, people had to make a special effort to stop and reflect on what they were doing and why.

      CHAPTER 3

      News, News, News

      “Go figure,” “Yeah, right,” and “No-ooooo!” were Al’s commentaries to himself after quickly scanning the USA Today headlines as he walked past the newsstand at the Newark, New Jersey, PATH train station that would take him to his office in the World Trade Center.

      “Thank God for slow news days,” Al mumbled to himself as he trotted to catch his train.

      As Al boarded his commuter train, Ann Weir, a thirty-five-yearold teacher from Astoria, Queens, found a seat on her subway train as it pulled out of the elevated Grand Avenue BMT station. She was on her way to a job interview at an investment firm’s World Trade Center office.

      Ann was a good teacher but was ready for a new challenge that didn’t include weak administrators, unaccountable parents, and disruptive students. Ann wanted a job that tapped her sharp, disciplined mind, opened doors to a whole new world, and raised the ceiling on her earning potential.

      She had followed in the footsteps of her mother, who had been a public school teacher in Queens for thirty-three years. The dynamics of a public school teacher’s job had changed for the worse in recent years. Her mom’s teaching experience had been much different during her tenure. The environment in Ann’s school district, especially in the last few years, had deteriorated. The focus was less on teaching and learning, and more on dealing with wider social issues. Ann wasn’t a sociologist; she was a teacher. So, while it was a difficult decision because she enjoyed the interaction with bright young minds, Ann had jumped at the opportunity presented in the online ad that had read, “Wanted—Teachers Looking for a Better Job. You’ve got great communication skills. Why not put them to work for a global financial services company that will double or triple your salary?”

      As Ann’s train approached the Queens Plaza station, at the foot of the 59th–Street Bridge that linked Queens to Manhattan, she looked across the East River to the renowned skyline and smiled.

      “Why are you smiling?” asked the elderly, casually-dressed woman sitting next to Ann. “I don’t mean to be rude. I’m just curious.”

      “I didn’t realize I was smiling,” replied Ann. “I guess I’m happy about the possibility of taking my life in a whole new direction. I’ve got a job interview with a big company this morning.”

      “That explains it. What do you do?”

      “Well, I’m a high school teacher, but the job interview is for a position as an investment counselor.” Ann’s faced glowed warmly, like a candle on a birthday cake.

      “A teacher?” the woman pondered. “I had some real good ones and some real bad ones. Both kinds had an impact on my life. The good ones were those who brought out the best in me, saw things in me that I didn’t see myself, encouraged me to build on my strengths, and nurtured my curiosity.” She smiled and nodded at Ann.

      “And the bad ones?” Ann chuckled.

      “Ah, the bad ones? I’d rather not think about them, because they did just the opposite,” the woman said, twisting her face as if in pain. “The one that I remember most is Mrs. O’Malley. ‘Forget about sciences,’ she told me over and over. ‘No reason for you, or any female student, to take science courses in college since you’ll never get a job where you’ll use them,’ she had advised me.”


      The woman’s face then lit up as she told Ann, “I recently retired from Kraft Foods where I was a senior nutritionist. I guess O’Malley was wrong. It’s strange for me to say this, but maybe I should thank her because proving her wrong helped me push myself harder when things weren’t going too well in college and when I was looking for a job.”

      “My mom was a great teacher. She loved her students and they loved her …” She paused a moment to reflect and then added, “She did all the things you just mentioned that define a good teacher … and more.”

      “She’s not teaching anymore?”

      “No. She took early retirement ten years ago. She didn’t want to retire, but they gave her an offer she couldn’t refuse, if you know what I mean. Her school had to cut its budget and thought the best way to do that was to replace her with a young, inexperienced teacher at half her salary.”

      “That’s a shame. I wonder if the powers that be will ever stop thinking of us all as just interchangeable parts.”

      “Well, my mom’s definitely not an interchangeable part in the classroom. I could tell you stories that you wouldn’t believe. In her first year as a teacher, there was a boy who was having all kinds of problems and …”

      Just then, their train pulled into the Lexington Avenue station in Manhattan.

      “Oh, this is my stop.” The woman got up from her seat next to Ann and looked down at her. “I’m on my way for a morning walk around Central Park. Good luck with your interview.”

      “Thanks. Enjoy your walk.” Ann smiled and watched the train doors close behind the woman.

      It was a beautiful day for a walk. The sun had just risen and the forecast called for a clear day with mild temperatures in the sixties.

      CHAPTER 4

      A Dream ... A Cartoon ... and God

      At St. Peter’s Catholic Church on the lower east side of Manhattan, in the shadows of the World Trade Center’s imposing twin towers, a NYC fire department chaplain contemplated the dream he had had the night before.

      He struggled to find meaning in it since the situation he had found himself in was so out of character. After all, when was the last time I cleaned my living quarters? He wondered. I have had a housekeeper for as long as I can remember.

     


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