We thought you might like to see the oral style in which Wayne Brouwer prepares his messages.
INTRODUCTION (1) In 1976, Gail Sheehy wrote a book about
the changes we go through in our lives. She called it Passages (Bantam, 1977).
And it opens with a scene
from one of the most terrible days in her life. She was a news reporter in Northern Ireland. She’d been sent there to write a story about the women:
what they were doing;
how they were coping with life in the middle of a war zone. She says she was standing on a balcony that day. She was looking out over a crowd of people
who’d just finished a civil rights demonstration. A young boy next to her was explaining
all that was going on. Suddenly, she says, right in the middle of his sentence, a bullet came screaming in,
and completely…