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Gina DiMartino

~ An Asheville Foodie, Writer, Creator & Dreamer

Gina DiMartino

Author Archives: ginamd

Goodbye 2013

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

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I was just watching the New Years Countdown on tv with my Uncle. They were remembering all the “highlights” from 2013. Miley Cyrus, Colorado legalizing marijuana, the mayor (governor?) from Toronto, Paula Deen, Duck Dynasty…Really? These are the things we have to remember from this year? How sad. I don’t have any new years resolutions. I might make some goals, but I haven’t put thought into that yet. I don’t really have a lot to say about this “new year”, but I just wanted to put some thoughts into words.

I moved from Kansas to NY this year. My Papa died. Right after a last game of cards with the fam. I survived a bomb. Lived in the hospital over a month. Couldn’t walk for almost 6. My brother got engaged, so 2014 will bring me a new sister and nephew. I went to Prince Edward Island. Something that has been on my bucket list for almost my whole life. I went to Kansas. I went to France. I’m currently in Texas. I am debt free. Three of my friends had sweet babies. Two friends got married. I made new friends. I cherished time with old ones. I learned that God does bring beauty from pain. My tattoo from 7 years ago brought to new light. I learned that He never leaves my side. Even for a moment. And when time are the hardest they have ever been, God’s strength truly is made perfect in weakness.

Honestly. This year has been the hardest, most painful year of my life. But I can still come up with better things than Miley Cyrus and Duck Dynasty.

I am thankful.

Happy 2014 everybody.

Happy New Year

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

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My friend Siobhan has such an amazing story. In the midst of tragedy, new hope. In the midst of sorrow, joy. God really does bring beauty from pain.

Luscious Lindsays

29 Friday Nov 2013

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chocolate cupcakes, dairy free, gluten free, gluten free cupcakes, gluten free dairy free

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I developed this recipe for my good friend Lindsay’s bridal shower. She is an amazing and beautiful person and I was honored to make cupcakes for her. She is also gluten-free, dairy-free, so this was a bit of a challenge! After four different recipes and lots of cupcake taste testing (Thanks to my family and friends), here is the end result. They were YUMMY!

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Luscious Lindsays 

1 cup almond milk (or chocolate almond…if you like it really chocolaty!)
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons gluten-free flour (Don’t use Bob’s!) (I forgot what I used but when I find it, I’ll post that)
1/3 cup dark cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder (make sure its gluten-free)
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup canola oil
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon almond extract

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

In a small bowl, sift together the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.

Whisk together the soy milk and the vinegar. Add the sugar, oil, and vanilla to the soy milk mixture and beat until foamy. Add the dry ingredients in two batches and beat until well incorporated.

Fill your cupcakes containers of choice 3/4 full. Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean and the top springs back when lightly touched. Transfer to a wire rack and allow cupcakes to cool completely before frosting.

Makes 12 cupcakes (I always double this recipe)

Frosting

1/2 cup shortening
1/2 cup soy margarine (I used Earth Balance original spread)
3 1/2 cups powdered sugar, sifted if clumpy
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 cup water (you could use almond milk, I just use water in all my frosting)

Beat the shortening and margarine together until well combined and fluffy. Add the sugar slowly until incorporated. Add the vanilla and half of the water. Beat for another 5 to 7 minutes until fluffy, adding more water to the desired consistency.
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I always make a double batch of frosting. This takes up an entire bag of powdered sugar and I usually end up making a ton of cupcakes so I need that much frosting anyway!

 

 

 

WCS Chapel Speech

21 Thursday Nov 2013

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Boston Strong, Webster Christian School

I’m speaking in chapel today at Webster Christian School. I am REALLY nervous! I have my speech written out (see below), but I still don’t know exactly what I’m going to say and I really want to express to these kids what God is teaching me, and I just don’t know the best way to say it! I am praying that God gives me the words!

WCS Chapel Speech:

On April fifteenth, nine members of our family were watching people cross the finish line of the Boston Marathon. We had dropped mom off at the starting line at 7am. We had jumped on the subway and gotten off at the halfway point to cheer her on as she passed. It was so inspirational! Watching people run past and encouraging them to keep going. Marathon runners are amazing One guy stopped right by us and threw up on the ground. So gross! After mom ran past at the halfway point, we jumped back on the subway with thousands of other people and made it downtown. There were people EVERYWHERE. The streets were packed. It took us forever to get to the finish line and even then we couldn’t see anything there were so many people crowding the sidewalks.

There was an announcer saying people’s names as they crossed. We were trying to get closer. We kept pushing forward towards the fence lining the street. My sister and aunt were right in front of me. My brother in law was right next to me and my brother and his girlfriend and her son were to my left. I couldn’t really see. I stood on my tiptoes. I was so worried mom would come and we wouldn’t be able to see her. Dad wasn’t with us. I kept wondering where he was and I kept texting him where we were but he didn’t respond. Dad’s friend Mike kept walking away to see if he could find him.

I stood on my tiptoes trying to see. My brother-in-law held his camera up in the air, snapping pictures of the runners. Without warning, the first bomb exploded throwing us all into the air and back onto the pavement. I remember flying backwards and a loud noise. We were 10-15 feet away from it. The sound was deafening. Thick smoke made it hard to see what was going on around us. Everything was muffled and chaos broke out immediately. I didn’t even hear the second bomb. I think I was knocked out for a minute or two. I only found out later there were two bombs when police asked me if I was at the first or second bomb.

I woke up on the ground and saw lots of blood on the sidewalk. It was all smoky and cloudy. My sister was standing over me stuffing her coat into the back to my leg. I realized that the blood on the sidewalk was coming from me. She told me to take off my jacket, then she was gone. I took off my jacket and tied it around my leg as tight as I could. I couldn’t hear, everything was really muffled. I learned later that both my ear drums had been blown as a result of the blast. I saw my phone and camera laying on the ground next to my backpack so I picked them all up and tied them to the sweatshirt on my leg so they wouldn’t get lost. I didn’t see anyone else. I kept blacking out from the loss of blood. My sister yelled at my brother-in-law to stay with me and she was going to stay with Pete’s girlfriend, Rebekah. My aunt was helping Rebekah’s son Noah. Colton took off his belt and tied it around my leg too. I was still losing a lot of blood.

I remember thinking that the people who make movies got it right. Bombs in movies are just like that. The slow motion, the muffled sounds, the chaos and screams in the background. I felt like I was watching a movie. It still seems unreal. I was a victim of a terrorist attack and was seriously injured in a bomb. Isn’t that crazy? I never thought that would be something I could say about myself.

I lay back on the sidewalk and thought I was probably going to die. I knew I was injured badly and I knew I was losing a lot of blood. I was surprised that I was so calm. I felt very at peace. I always thought I would be scared to die. Even thouh I knew I was going to heaven, I never thought I would be able to experience such peace in the midst of such chaos.

By the time they put me in a wheel chair to get me to an ambulance I couldn’t see at all. I thought I was going to be blind. Colton held my hand until they put me in the ambulance. They wouldn’t let him come with us because there wasn’t any room. There was another man who was injured in the ambulance already. He grabbed my hand and kept telling me it was going to be ok. His name was Steve. The ambulance driver kept yelling into the radio that he had amputees and we needed to get to the hospital. That’s when I realized I was probably going to lose my leg. Steve lost his right leg below his knee. We were in rehab together for a few weeks and have kept in touch since I left Boston. A few weeks ago we went back to Boston for the World Champions parade and I was able to see him and meet his wife and son.

My right leg was cut by some sort of shrapnel, severing my main artery and two main nerves. I had three surgeries that first week. I lost one muscle on the back of my knee and part of my calf muscle was taken out. I was in the ICU for two days and in the hospital for about a month. I still have no feeling from the knee down. It may return, but will take a long time to know if the nerves will regrow. Until a few months ago I couldn’t even move my ankle or foot at all. Now I can, but only very small movements.

While I was in the hospital I experienced something I never had before. I woke up almost every day with a smile on my face and a positive attitude. I was able to laugh with the nurses and cheer up others who were struggling. I had absolutely no strength of my own so I knew that I was living each day on God’s strength. I was in extreme pain almost every day, but I still was able to smile and remain positive. I knew people were praying for me because I could FEEL their prayers. I was able to get up every day because you guys and thousands of other people were praying for me. It was an amazing feeling and people in the hospital noticed it too. My physical therapist sat down with me over coffee a few weeks ago and asked me how it was possible that I was such a light in that dark time. She said they all discussed it at the hospital. And I was able to share my faith with her and tell her that it wasn’t me. It was the strength of God working through me.

Don’t get me wrong. There are still days that I cry all day. At the beginning, I thought I would never walk again and I was so scared. And still there are days when I get so frustrated with my foot and so upset that I can’t feel it. And even more upset that I might never be able to wear cute shoes again! Those are the days that I have to make myself get out of bed and do my exercises and put on some praise music and sing really loud even if I don’t want to. Those are the days that I need to CLING so hard to God’s promises.

I have seen God working every single day. 2 Corinthians 12:9 Says But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.

God’s strength is made perfect in weakness and that really became true to me. In the hospital I had no strength, I knew that His strength was carrying me. And now that I am getting stronger, I am learning that I need God more than ever. He is really teaching me dependance on Him. He is my refuge in this time of trouble and I need to remind myself of this every day, every minute. Psalm 32:7 says “You are my hiding place; you will protect me from trouble and surround me with songs of deliverance”

So no matter what you are going through, no matter how hard things are, God is ever faithful. He is constant. Always the same. Always our refuge, our hiding place. He has strength for us when we don’t have the strength to go on. He always hears us when we cry for him. I could have died in the bomb, but I didn’t. God saved my life and obviously still has things for me to do, and I hope that I never forget that He never left me and He never failed me.

My Lighthouse

19 Tuesday Nov 2013

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My Lighthouse, The Rend Collective

I went to The Rend Collective’s concert Sunday night. They sang this song from their new album. I absolutely love it. When my life is all stormy and overwhelming, I know that I need to depend on God because He can calm the storm or help carry me through it. The lyrics to this song are exactly what I needed to hear. When you are lost in the storm, you fix your eyes on the Lighthouse.

Lyrics:
Verse 1:
In my wrestling and in my doubts
In my failures You won’t walk out
Your great love will lead me through
You are the peace in my troubled sea
You are the peace in my troubled sea

Verse 2:
In the silence, You won’t let go
In my questions, Your truth will hold 
Your great love will lead me through
You are the peace in my troubled sea
You are the peace in my troubled sea

Chorus:
My Lighthouse, My lighthouse
Shining in the darkness, I will follow You
My Lighthouse, My Lighthouse
I will trust the promise, You will carry me safe to shore (Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh)
Safe to Shore (Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh)
Safe to Shore (Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh)
Safe to Shore

Verse 3:
I won’t fear what tomorrow brings
With each morning I’ll rise and sing
My God’s love will lead me through
You are the peace in my troubled sea
You are the peace in my troubled sea

Bridge:
Fire before us, You’re the brightest
You will lead us safe to shore

Forgive Your Brother

16 Saturday Nov 2013

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David Whiting, Forgive Your Brother, Forgiveness, Sermon on forgiveness

This is a sermon by David Whiting. I wish it had video because the visual aid he used was amazing. But I think from the audio you can get the idea. This was one of the first sermons I ever heard David preach. It was one of the first weeks I visited Northridge. All by myself. I had just been greatly wronged by someone I trusted and my heart was a little broken and a lot in need of healing. I thought I needed an apology. I thought I needed someone to do something for ME. But after this sermon I realized that I needed to forgive. I was in tears by the end and after the sermon drove immediately to that person’s house and tearfully told them I forgave them. They had so greatly wronged me and I was forever changed, our relationship was never restored, but forgiving them lifted such a huge burden off my heart. My life was not only changed by the trial, but it was also changed by forgiveness.

That day I stopped looking for a church. That day I belonged to Northridge Church and I never looked back. My life changed. I came back to God. I stopped living for myself. It’s a decision I will never regret. Please take some time to listen to this sermon.

http://www.northridgerochester.com/sermon_audio/2008/2008-02-24AM_H.mp3

Here’s a link to the video he showed at the end of the message. Watch it. It will humble you greatly. These people’s response to the gospel is how we should respond, but we so often fail to recognize the enormity of Christ’s sacrifice for us.

Crochet Rag Rug

31 Thursday Oct 2013

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crochet, rag rug

 

 

 

 

Today I bought 5 yards of flannel. Nice warm and fuzzy plaids and plains. I am going to cut it into 3/4 inch strips and make it into yarn which I will then make into a flannel rag crochet rug.

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Yup. I’m crazy. About 4 cuts into my navy blue I think I will probably realize what a huge task I have taken on and give up. But I have nothing but time. So we’ll see. I am excited for this project. I even ordered a HUGE crochet needle from Amazon since no one here sells it.

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There’s a beautiful pattern in this crochet book for a rag rug and I just couldn’t resist trying it. Of course no one sells yarn like that so I had to make my own. But oh well. It was a fun project and It came out beautiful.

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It is a hexagon shape. I think next time I would just make my own pattern and do an oval. It’s not as tight of a crochet as I would like. Maybe I could double up the yarn or something. But for a first try, its pretty neat.

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WORLD Magazine article: Rochester Strong

29 Tuesday Oct 2013

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Boston Marathon, Boston Strong, Bstrong, Jamie Dean, Rochester Strong

 We recently had a great article in the WORLD magazine and I forgot to share it with you! Here it is! Jamie Dean did a great job sharing our story from a Christian perspective.

Rochester strong: Jamie Dean

BOSTON BOMBINGS | The DiMartino family is one among many beginning a life forever altered by the Boston bombing

HEALING: Gina, Peter, and his girlfriend (from right to left) recovering at the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.Enlarge Image

Photo courtesy of the DiMartino family
HEALING: Gina, Peter, and his girlfriend (from right to left) recovering at the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.

Gina DiMartino’s summer plans in Rochester, N.Y., include reading, sketching, visiting a local pool, and waiting for the severely damaged nerves in her right leg to regrow from her knee to her toes.

It’s not how she imagined the summer.

DiMartino, 31, also didn’t envision sharing a room in her parents’ home with her 28-year-old brother, Peter, while he waits for his nearly severed Achilles tendon to mend. Like hundreds of others injured in the Boston bombing in April, a spring trip brought a summer season of coping with the aftermath of terrorism.

Nearly three months after two bombs at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured at least 265, the long recovery continues. At least 15 survivors are coping with missing limbs. Others are healing from nerve damage, broken bones, and burns. Families are learning to care for them. Many—including uninjured bystanders—are confronting the trauma of a day seared into their memories.

For DiMartino, some days bring pain and frustration as she learns to manage an injured leg and a foot she may not feel for at least a year. But the Christian and worship team member at a local church says the experience has also brought an unexpected sense of clarity. “I know I’m right where God wants me to be,” she says. “And that’s a good feeling.”

The journey from terror on a Boston sidewalk to comfort in a Rochester living room hasn’t been easy. But DiMartino’s story is one example that offers Christ-centered hope for others facing a summer they didn’t expect.

For DiMartino, confronting life changes began before the Boston bombings. In March, the Liberty University graduate (MBA) had just moved back to her parents’ home in Rochester, N.Y., after living and working in Kansas for several months. (DiMartino has worked for Starbucks for nine years.)

She wrestled with uncertainty about her future, and contemplated the next phase of her life. The time in Kansas didn’t bring answers. DiMartino returned to Rochester, played keyboards at Northridge Church, and prayed for guidance.

She also prepared for a road trip: Her family planned to travel to Boston to watch her mother, Mona, run in the Boston Marathon.

The group included DiMartino, her parents, her brother, Peter, and her sister and brother-in-law from Asheville, N.C. Peter’s girlfriend flew up from Houston with her young son. The group enjoyed a weekend of visiting relatives and watching a Red Sox game in seats atop the Green Monster—the 37-foot, left field wall at Fenway Park.

On Monday morning, DiMartino tracked her mother on an app that showed her location on the marathon route. By Monday afternoon, the family gathered at the finish line. The mood was festive. DiMartino’s father crossed the street to get a better angle for a photo.

The next thing DiMartino remembers is a loud sound: “Everybody was kind of lifted up and floating backwards.” The blast muffled DiMartino’s hearing, but she could see blood pouring from her leg. A piece of shrapnel had sliced a 9-inch gash near the bend of her knee, severing a main artery and two main nerves.

The blast also hit Peter, nearly severing his Achilles tendon and causing serious burns on his arms and back. Peter’s girlfriend suffered a severe leg injury, but her son escaped with a cut.

With DiMartino’s father forced by police to stay across the street, and her mother nearly three-quarters of a mile away, her uninjured sister, Kim, took charge. “She took off her coat and shoved it in my leg,” says DiMartino. While Kim and her (also uninjured) husband tended the family, DiMartino remained lucid: She tied a tourniquet around her knee, and tied her bag (containing her wallet, ID, and phone) to the tourniquet. “Then I laid down on the sidewalk,” she says. “And I thought: ‘Okay, I might die now.’”

Emergency workers quickly loaded DiMartino onto an ambulance with another victim. The man pleaded with workers to find his 4-year-old son, and he held DiMartino’s hand during the transport. One of the last things DiMartino remembers is a paramedic calling ahead to the hospital to tell doctors: “We have amputees here.”

Nearly 24 hours later, DiMartino awoke in the Intensive Care Unit of Boston Medical Center. She was thankful to discover she didn’t lose her leg, but she also learned her injury was serious.

On Friday, doctors operated for a third time. As police and FBI agents in nearby Watertown, Mass., combed the streets looking for accused bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, surgeons leaned over DiMartino’s leg, meticulously reconnecting her nerves.

The surgery was successful, but doctors told DiMartino her nerves would have to regrow from her knee to her toes before she could feel her foot again. The estimated time: 400 days.

The next two weeks brought a steady stream of visitors, as her parents alternated visits between DiMartino and her brother. (Peter was recovering from surgery and skin grafts.) Friends and leaders from her church in Rochester drove six hours to visit. And the day before DiMartino left for rehab, another visitor arrived: Steve, the injured man who rode with her in the ambulance.

From their stretchers, Steve and DiMartino greeted each other with tears. DiMartino inquired after his son. He was unharmed. She asked Steve about his own condition. He said he was fine. She pressed, and she learned the truth: The paramedics had been right about his injury. He lost his leg from the knee down.

CHANGE OF PLANS: The DiMartinos along the marathon route with signs for mom.
DiMartino family

CHANGE OF PLANS: The DiMartinos along the marathon route with signs for mom.

CHANGE OF PLANS: Peter working with his therapist in Boston.
Associated Press/Photo by Charles Krupa

CHANGE OF PLANS: Peter working with his therapist in Boston.

CHANGE OF PLANS: Gina recovering at home with a young friend.
DiMartino family

CHANGE OF PLANS: Gina recovering at home with a young friend.In the months since the Boston bombing, dozens of survivors have learned to cope with injury and trauma. Like the DiMartinos, some families had multiple victims. For example, brothers J.P. and Paul Norden, ages 33 and 31, both lost their right leg above the knee.

Major injuries mean lost income and mounting medical bills for many. Weeks-long hospital stays cost tens of thousands of dollars. Depending on the level of technology, a single prosthetic limb can cost between $5,000 and $50,000, according to the advocacy group Amputee Coalition. Patients must replace the limbs every few years.

Depending on caps in patients’ insurance plans, some could face a lifetime of medical bills. And though donors contributed more than $30 million to The One Fund Boston to help cover expenses for survivors, the fund’s administrator acknowledged it wouldn’t be enough to cover all the needs.

For now, many survivors are focusing on moment-by-moment recovery. Some are finding encouragement in their churches and communities. An overflow crowd packed St. Ann Catholic Church in Neponset, Mass., for a memorial service for Martin Richard, one of three killed in the bombing. The family scheduled the service for June 9—Martin’s 9th birthday.

The many children at the service included Martin’s 7-year-old sister, Jane, who lost her left leg below the knee. Priest Sean Connor talked with the children about hope, and remembered Jane’s first words to him after she awoke in the hospital: “Where have you been? You have to pray.”

For those coping with post-traumatic stress, Alasdair Groves—a counselor with the Christian Counseling & Education Foundation (CCEF)—says it’s important to remind survivors: “This is a normal response to an abnormal situation.” (Indeed, some military officials are beginning to drop the “D” from “PTSD,” recognizing that stress after a traumatic situation like combat is less a disorder and more a normal reaction to something terrible.)

For Christians coping with trauma, Groves says it’s important to learn to embrace both God’s sovereignty and His goodness: “It’s like the story of the redemption of the world: It started great, it went bad, but it’s going to get better. That’s how God works.”

Groves emphasizes that’s not a trite saying, but a process that takes time. Those helping survivors of trauma must give room to grieve and suffer. But Christians who embrace God’s sovereignty can believe God will use evil for good, he says: “You will be useful for having gone through this.”

Back in Rochester, that’s DiMartino’s hope. These days, she balances doctor appointments and rehab with sketching, reading, welcoming visitors, and slowly returning to cooking. Her blog features recipes, music, and pictures of smiling visits with friends.

She’s thankful she and her brother are safe, and says she doesn’t mind sharing a room. (Peter moved back to his parents’ home to recover, and DiMartino can’t climb the stairs to her upstairs bedroom.)

Still, some days are hard: She can’t leave the house without help. She still hasn’t gone into a crowd of people. Everything takes longer. She knows her recovery will be a long process. Not long after returning home, she blogged: “I did sit down on the couch and cry tonight. … But my sweet parents sat with me. Cried with me. And prayed for me. And I know God’s mercies are new every morning. …”

DiMartino says reflecting on her experience helps: She thinks about how her sister—with no medical training—knew exactly what to do in the critical first moments after the bombing.

She thinks about how her spring swimming regimen gave her the upper body strength she would need to use crutches. She thinks about how God is taking care of her family through practical help from her church and friends: “That gives us hope.”

DiMartino began that kind of reflection in the hospital, blogging on April 26 about Matthew 6: “We may never be the same as we were before,” she wrote. “Even if we get to ‘normal’ physically, these events will always be with us.” She continued: “I don’t know what that will look like one month from now, one year from now, ten years from now. But I read these verses and I am comforted. My Father knows what the future looks like, and He tells me: ‘Do not be worried about your life.’”

DiMartino says that’s been a surprising comfort: “I had no idea what to do with my life in March. … And I know it’s not a great answer, but now I know where God wants me to be because I can’t be anywhere else. And I know what he wants me to do because I can’t do anything else. … I’m excited to see what He does with this time, and I just hope I use it wisely.”

In the meantime, she’s happy to return to church. After her second Sunday back, she blogged about a worship song with the line: “You were singing in the dark and whispering Your promise even when I could not hear. …”

She wrote: “Sometimes we don’t know what God is doing or why He is sending trials our way. We can’t see, we can’t hear. But He is reaching for us. … He can see. He can hear. He knows what’s up ahead. He will never forsake us. Not even for a moment.”

A few good men

18 Friday Oct 2013

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“Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art… It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things that give value to survival.” C. S. Lewis

A friend recently asked me to make a list of all the things I am looking for in a friend and she would pray that I would be blessed with that type of friendship. Why is it that some friendships are so hard. Some require so much work and are almost to the point of being exhausting. Other friends are kindred spirits and maintaining an amazing friend relationship is almost effortless. You can be apart from them for years with barely any communication and yet when you come back together its as if you were never apart. I have friends in all spectrums of this scenario. Since the bombing I have really been thinking about which friendships I need to invest in and which ones I need to let go. Some of them are not really worth the drama required to maintain them. I have enough other things to worry about without adding friend drama to the mix. What does it mean to be a good friend? What am I looking for in a friend? What do I need from a friendship and what do I need to give?

Things I am looking for in a friend

1. Loyal
Proverbs 17:17 A friend loves at all times

2. Values me and my time
John 15:12-14 This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you. There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command.

3. Honest & holds me accountable
Proverbs 27:6 Faithful are the wounds of a friend…27:9 The sweetness of a friend comes from his honest counsel.

4. Fun: someone who lets you be yourself

5. No drama: doesn’t talk about me behind my back
Proverbs 16:28 A whisperer separates close friends

6. Genuinely loves me

7. Compassionate

8. Challenges me to be a better person spiritually
27:17 Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another
“The next best thing to being wise oneself is to live in a circle of those who are.” C. S. Lewis

9. Respects my other friends

10. Values their family and treats them with honor and respect

That’s my list so far. I’m sure it will be added to or taken away from over time. But for now, that’s what I’m looking for. That’s what I am praying for in a friend. Each of these attributes are important to me. However, I know that in pursuing friends who demonstrate these things to me, I need to in turn strive daily to be this type of friend to others. I cant expect to find friends of this noble character if I myself am not. So in addition to praying for friends with these characters, I am praying that I would be this friend to others!

Luke 6:31-34 (The Message) Here is a simple rule of thumb for behavior: Ask yourself what you want people to do for you; then grab the initiative and do it for them! If you only love the lovable, do you expect a pat on the back? Run-of-the-mill sinners do that. If you only help those who help you, do you expect a medal? Garden-variety sinners do that. If you only give for what you hope to get out of it, do you think that’s charity? The stingiest of pawnbrokers do that.

What are you looking for in a friend?

Liberty Journal Article

12 Saturday Oct 2013

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Boston Strong, Liberty Journal, Liberty University

Here is an article featured in the Liberty University Journal. As an alum of the college, they reached out to me to see if I would allow them to include my story in the Fall edition of the magazine.

Graduate injured in Boston Marathon bombing finds hope in midst of tragedy

Gina DiMartino shares time with friends as she recovers in a Boston hospital.
DiMartino shares time with friends as she recovers in a Boston hospital.

What began as a fun family trip quickly became a life-changing experience for alumna Gina DiMartino (’07, M.B.A.). DiMartino, of Rochester, N.Y., and several members of her family traveled to Boston to watch her mother run in the Boston Marathon on April 15.

As DiMartino eagerly tracked her mother’s progress via a smart phone app, she and three other loved ones were caught in one of two blasts that claimed the lives of three and wounded at least 264 near the finish line.

DiMartino was only 10-15 feet away when the bomb went off, sending her and the other spectators flying through the air. The trauma caused her to teeter in and out of consciousness, so she only remembers the event in pieces: the sound of the explosion, being lifted off the ground, her sister binding a sweatshirt around her bleeding leg, being ushered into an ambulance, and waking up in the hospital a day later.

Her injuries included a large gash near her right knee, resulting in severe nerve damage that caused her to lose feeling from the knee down. Thankfully, she is expected to fully regain feeling in her leg and foot, but the process may take up to 400 days. Her brother, Peter, his girlfriend, and her son were also injured but are all expected to recover sooner.

DiMartino was released from the hospital on May 9, after three weeks in a hospital room and another stint at a rehab center. Now she is living on the first floor of her parents’ Rochester home as she recovers. She has limited mobility and goes to physical therapy three days a week.

Through this experience, DiMartino has found strength and encouragement in the Lord. She clings to the words of the Apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:9, “God’s power is made perfect in weakness” (paraphrase).

“Laying in the hospital bed, I could feel God’s strength,” she said. “I knew that I had absolutely no strength to get through all the surgeries and everything that was going on, and dealing with it. I could feel God’s strength, and I could feel He was with me.”

She said even in her darkest moments, God never fails to bring encouragement, often in the form of a text or email. In addition to tremendous support from family, friends, and her church, she has also received encouragement from a number of people she has never met, many of them fellow believers.

“It is an amazing feeling to be so surrounded and protected by God and prayer and just feeling His promises fulfilled in you,” she said. “There have been so many people who have been so encouraging to me, many that I don’t even know.”

Written by Andrew Menard

 

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