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Got Lemons? Make Lemonade!


By Craig Pinley

E. GREENWICH, RI (September 23, 2004) - There's an old adage that says "when life gives you lemons, make lemonade." If her autobiography is any indicator, Rudy Wilson Galdonik is one of the best lemonade salespersons attending an Evangelical Covenant Church.

Wilson Galdonik of Christ Church in Rhode Island has written Take Heart: True Stories of Life, Love and Laughter (2004, Broad Horizons Press), which documents the physical struggles that have strengthened her faith and the stories surrounding her life that help her to keep a healthy perspective. The author begins her published story by stating, "I believe we each have a voice, a purpose for being. When we recognize and honor that purpose, we will be living our lives as God intended and success will naturally follow." The success that Wilson Galdonik has found lies in the discovery of what God wants for each individual.

Rudy Wilson Galdonik Diagnosed with a hole in her heart at age five, Wilson Galdonik wasn't allowed to be very active physically and it was difficult for her to discern what purpose God had for her life. "As I continued toward adulthood, I clung to the only goal I felt I could one day achieve: that I would one day in the distant future be the proud owner of a fireplace," she writes.

Though she worked in human resources at a hospital and as a travel agent, among other things, writing became Wilson Galdonik's passion, even though it was a struggle at first. She discovered her muse in a painful moment; when her husband was diagnosed with cancer.

"I think it was a typical thing," she said in describing how she discovered writing as her calling. "I was seeing all kinds of reinforcement that I could write and yet I never pursued it from an educational standpoint. But the day my husband was diagnosed with cancer, I stepped into the parking lot and a statement was made in my head: 'Write a book.' And at this point I thought, 'Like I have anything better to do.' But I never forgot that statement. And it was a lot of little pieces of the puzzling together over the period of 10 years."

Wilson Galdonik's husband died 13 months after the original diagnosis and the struggle she had in grieving her husband's death led to a chance conversation with a newspaper reporter who asked her to write about her experience. Later, a church asked Wilson Galdonik to speak about her struggles. Then, she began giving children's sermons at her church and others told her that public speaking might be an avenue where God could use her story to bring others to faith or renewed hope.

Over the years, personal physical troubles – including open-heart surgery at age 25 – have turned into a blessing as Wilson Galdonik has discovered that human weakness can be a bridge to relating to others. Suffering is never enjoyable, she says, but while reading certain parts of Wilson Galdonik's book, you wouldn't think the multiple operations were any problem at all. Her stories of her hospital visits, the patients that share her hospital room and the "Adonis-doc" and others caring for her leave you wishing you could suffer from a life-threatening physical malady yourself.

There are entire chapters that will have you laughing out loud every time you turn a page – anyone who has ever read noted author Erma Bombeck would appreciate Wilson Galdonik's prose. The story of "the airport escalator that scared the crap out of her dog" is worth the price of the book alone. Other chapters about her husband's cancer diagnosis and eventual death are tear-jerkers too, and she writes about a second open heart surgery as well. Overall, there are many poignant lessons to be gained from her life story and both secular and Christian audiences could appreciate what she has to say about how attitude affects one's perspective on life.

"I'm the normal person like everyone else – I have my good days and bad days," she says. "But people in the church community are there to lift you up and you know you'll be able to rise to the challenge and eventually you'll be able to use it to help someone else. I've had my fair share of kicking and screaming with God. But I've found that when I've been most incorrigible, that's when God has held me the closest. And that seems to resonate with people."

Along with a rare ability to find the humor in life, Wilson Galdonik said she has been blessed by the love of her church and family. She got acquainted with her husband, Mike, (a church elder) during a mission trip to Mexico. Two other products of God's faithfulness are her children, Brad and Darah. Brad's adventures were a catalyst for her entry into humorous writing.

Brad Wilson hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2001 and his mother emailed a dozen or so friends with updates on the teenager's progress. Many commented that she should write similar articles about her own life. And eventually her email list reached well over 100. She wrote a similar set of emails when her son hiked the Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada last year – it can be found at www.rudywg.com.

Wilson Galdonik writes and speaks for a living, but she makes a difference in her community in other ways. She is the co-chair of the American Heart Association's Women and Heart Disease Committee for Southeastern New England and a member of the Association of Applied Therapeutic Humor. She's also on the board of directors for the Adult Congenital Heart Association.

To learn more about Wilson Galdonik, email her at Rudy@Rudywg.com.

Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church.

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