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The Ruins and Rebuilding

Posted on November 1, 2025November 3, 2025 by Pam

I just returned from Greece. I had never been there and what a privilege to view the many ruins, monasteries, and dig-sites. Now that the jet lag is behind me I am wondering, in amazement, how did the ruins get ruined? All fall down? Did people stop caring and giving care to those buildings? They are what remain of the amazing architectural feats of the time. Greece is splendid with multiple regions ruled in different ways over many transitions throughout history. Did they build the remarkable Acropolis and Parthenon and then why abandon? That’s not the whole story according to a friend, Ron Robb, who reminded me that some of the Greek ruins were destroyed by other nations like France. The Parthenon was mostly destroyed in 1687 when the Ottoman Muslim Turks used it to store gunpowder. Enemies from Venice fired a motor into the building which ignited the gun powder, destroying a big part of the building. These acclaimed stacks of stones were built in Athens 447-432 BC to honor goddess Athena Parthenon, representing the power of the Athenian Empire after a victory over the Persians. Today, many of the sculptures sit in the British Museum, having been controversially removed by Lord Elgin in the early 1800’s. So do we sometimes build something then let it crumble? Strangers come and try to disassemble our hard work. We start a friendship, project, marriage, business, health regimen, or many plans. Something changes and a new plan is necessary. Pause is required. The debris behind us begins to make a pile. I have no answer because those moments come to us all. Some will move on and start to rebuild. Some sit frozen in front of the tv because it is all too much. Build and fail. Build and fail. Build again. What should I do next? What should you do next?

"Thoughts from a genuinely evaluative mind."

Pam writes so that must make her a writer. Recently retired, she can now fill days with family, friends, missions, writing, creating, and showing up for whomever needs her. Pam loves the Lord and people. The Bible is God’s love letter to us (and who does not need more love) so she studies and writes some more.

Pam lives in the Pacific Northwest but was home-grown in Southern California. She attended San Jose Bible College and finished a Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry at UCLA. She became a teacher, then a Research and Development Chemist, then she built two successful real estate businesses in two states. Pam also pursued study at Fuller Theological Seminary and just completed six months serving in missions abroad.

Pam has two amazing children, married to two precious in-laws, and five sweet grandchildren. Pam is a gifted connector and communicator and the Northwest has the perfect climate for staying inside and writing – or baking! She has been writing since a wee one and is currently converting many years of blogging, by topic, into ten books. The first is a collection from 2011 titled, Beautiful Enough. The second is a yearly day-timer titled, Weekly Planner - Lessons in Life, Glory, and Grace. Number three is in progress with the working title, Christmas Today.

Ten facts about Pam in no particular order:

  1. On the team that developed an insulation for the Alaskan oil pipeline.
  2. Loves looking at homes, decorating, and has flipped five homes.
  3. Likes being tall.
  4. Films have helped define her vocabulary.
  5. Comes from Colorado tenement farmers with history traced to Wales.
  6. Was lost but now is found.
  7. Baking makes her happy – as does eating sweets with coffee, of course.
  8. She thinks mission work is the most important work in the world.
  9. The church started in Rome so she is learning Italian.
  10. Pam is a work in progress!

“I will be your God throughout your lifetime - until your hair is white with age. I made you, and I will care for you. I will carry you along and save you.” Isaiah 46:4

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