My Autobiography

Reading Time: 12 Hours

Chapter 1
Early Childhood (1971 - 1978)

I have no memory of this time of my life. This chapter is based on emails Jim Taylor and Linda  Akiyama sent to me a few years ago.

I was born on March 30, 1971 to Jim and Linda Taylor in Portland, Oregon. They named me Peter James Taylor. Jim worked as the family breadwinner while Linda stayed at home with me. 

Soon after I was born, my pediatrician noticed that my motor skills were not developing and I was missing other developmental milestones. I also would also not allow anyone to hold or comfort me. My parents improvised ways of keeping me close without causing me discomfort.

When I was a year old, I was sent to the Oregon Health & Science University Doernbecher Children’s Hospital for further evaluation of my condition. I was hospitalized numerous times and underwent outpatient testing many times for various disorders. Every time I would go to the hospital for testing, my parents would hope for an explanation on my condition only to run into a dead end.

Then one day, my parents were called into the hospital. They were told that my psychologist had some findings to reveal. They had high hopes that they would finally get an explanation of my condition. They were sorely misled.

In the meeting, my parents were told that I had a cracked skull and the social worker demanded an explanation from them. They had no explanation. They had never dropped me and had been extra careful to avoid accidents to keep me safe. They were told that if the doctors  found any further physical damage or evidence of inappropriate behavior, the police would be involved.

This absolutely devastated my parents. They could not imagine being accused of such horrendous behavior. Because of this and other factors Linda could no longer care for me for awhile. Jim had to work so the hospital found temporary care for me. Later, my parents were informed  hat an x-ray technician had misread the x-ray and there never was a crack in my skull. But the news was a little too late—the emotional  damage and marital stress had already taken effect.

Some time later I was diagnosed with congenital Cerebral Palsy. I was admitted to the Crippled Children Division for motor skills rehabilitation. After further tests, I was diagnosed with Autism.

I went through programs designed to help children with emotional disabilities. My parents and I were involved in many individual and group therapy sessions with other parents. Needless to say, it became a full-time commitment for my parents. The program was under the scrutiny of doctors. Many times when they couldn’t explain what was going on, they would revert to the blame game—directed at my parents and more  than hinting that they were inadequate parents.

Soon, I reached the age where OHSU was no longer equipped to take care of me. The public school denied my enrollment due to my behavior issues and Autism diagnosis. Private school was beyond my parent’s resources and homeschooling was not recognized at that time. So, I  was sent to Edgefield School as an alternative for children with special emotional needs. The problem with Edgefield is that it only lasted three or  four years It was a boarding school. I would be there from Sunday evening until Friday afternoon.

By that time, Jim and Linda’s marriage had broken down. There was no abuse going on but they were no longer happy in their relationship. Linda got custody of my little brother and me.

Because Linda was a single mother, she had to find work. Mike Matern, the director of Edgefield school had just accepted a position as the
director of The Casey Family Program—a private organization which provides excellent foster care services. Mike Matern heard of Linda’s plight and offered his services, but he didn’t push. Linda realized that it had financial and practical resources that were beyond the scope of both Jim and her. She realized that The Casey Family Program could provide for a home for me that both Jim and she could not.

It was the hardest decision they ever made. Like the Biblical account of baby Moses’s mother putting him into a basket on the Nile and releasing him into God’s hands, so Jim and Linda put me into The Casey Family Program’s foster care system and left me in God’s hands.

Linda chose to not contact me unless I first reached out to her (which didn’t occur until 2010). Jim would meet with me once a year. For the most part, I wouldn’t engage in our yearly visits because I had no memory of him or Linda. (My memory begins at age 7—after I was put into foster care.)

Never did I realize that the storm the devil put Jim and Linda through during my early childhood years, he would visit upon our marriage ten-fold 30 years later.

Chapter 2
Elementary School Years (1978 - 1984)

While at the Edgefield School, when I was 7 years old, I was placed into the home of Lyle and Fern Ringering. Because I really fit into the family well and fell in love with all my siblings, I soon changed my name to Peter Taylor Ringering. I was the youngest of 7 children—David, Kevin, Steven, Dawna, Tim, and Rebecca. There is a 20-year gap between my oldest brother and me (In fact, he was like a second father to me).

Developmentally, I caught up quickly soon after coming to the Ringering household. Before, I would rarely talk. Now my family couldn’t get me to stop talking.

As devout Seventh-Day Adventists, my Ringering family was vegetarian and ate processed foods very sparingly.  It took me some time to adapt to their vegetarian diet. We grew and canned our own vegetables and picked, froze and canned fruit from the surrounding fields and orchards. Even though a lot of the autistic gastrointestinal and academic negative effects went away, the social and psychological effects never left.

I started 2nd grade at Rivergate Adventist Elementary School and did pretty well. I attended that school through 8th grade. My older siblings looked after me until they went off to high school. I learned from their past experiences with the teachers. I was pretty much main stream and did not have to be placed in any kind of special education classroom.

My interest in computers started soon after I came to the Ringering household. Even though I had no real exposure to computers until I was in high school, whenever we would go out shopping as a family, I would always be found in the Electronics department gazing intently at the Commodore Computers for sale.

I had a very happy home life. My parents taught me a good work ethic and kept me busy with many household chores. We hiked, camped and went on many road trips. I had a very healthy and active relationship with my grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins. Dad worked as a carpenter at Adventist Health Portland and Mom was the director of Adventist Adoption and Family Services.

Often we would read from and study the Bible and pray. When I was 12, I was baptized.  However, my baptism wasn’t a result of recognizing that I was a sinner and repenting of my sin but of wanting to fit in with the church culture I was in.  I was involved in many Bible classes at church and at school. I was also involved in many church youth groups and outings. My parents and church gave me a very solid spiritual foundation.  Even though on the outside I appeared to be a typical Christian youth, on the inside I was living a carnal life.

 

Chapter 3
High School Years (1984 - 1989)

After finishing 8th grade, my parents enrolled me into Hoodview Junior Academy for 9th grade. (At the time, it went up to 9th grade.) All my older siblings were attending different schools so for the first time in my life, I was in an unfamiliar environment.

I was severely bullied. My self esteem and grades dropped. I had never had to defend myself, so for the most part, I would just take it. This motivated my bullies even more.

I attended Portland Adventist Academy for my Sophomore year and the first half of my Junior year. The bullying only intensified there. It got to the point where I was called “The Reject”.

There, I got my first exposure to computers. The business classroom had a PC (IBM PC 8088). To get away from my bullies, I would spend countless hours there figuring out how it worked. I taught myself PC-DOS and wrote a little game in BASIC. The English classroom had an Apple II E and the Math teacher had a Macintosh computer.

After a while, I was completely miserable in school. I begged my parents to send me to a boarding school. Because I was physically developing slowly, they were reluctant. However, on January 1988, they sent me to Milo Adventist Academy—a Christian boarding high school located in the mountains of southwest Oregon.

I thrived at Milo. Because we had no easy access to the rest of society, all the students had comradery and bullying was kept to a minimum. For the last half of my Junior year, I roomed with an awesome guy. We got along really well. I dated a girl for a few months. Because I had a sexual addiction, I tried to get too close and we soon broke up.

I bought my first computer (a Tandy 1000 EX) on January 1989 and really enjoyed it. I spent many hours playing games and getting homework done.

I went to church and participated in Bible class and other spiritual activities mostly because I had to.

I graduated in June, 1989 and spent that summer working on campus.

 

Chapter 4
College Years (1989 - 1996)

In the Fall of 1989, I attended Walla Walla University.

Being an elite, private Adventist college, it was pretty expensive. So I applied for and was awarded an all-expenses-paid scholarship to the college of my choice by The Casey Family Program. God’s provision was and still is amazing!

I really fit into the student body in college and enjoyed my studies. I majored in Data Entry and Business Education. Many wonder why I didn’t go into Computer Science. At the time, my math skills were lacking. (I’ve never been able to handle math equations with letters and Greek symbols mixed in.) Looking back, God used the concepts I learned in my Data Entry and Business Education classes to prepare me for my future computer programming career.

It was this time I stopped attending Saturday morning church service. I would listen to the college church service on the radio on Saturday mornings in my dorm room while playing games on my computer. However, just as the pastor was wrapping up his sermon, I would go to the cafeteria to beat the rush of all my fellow students leaving church and going straight to lunch.

I spent pretty much all of my time at college—including summers and most breaks. I had a healthy group of friends and was well-respected by my fellow students and professors.

During my Sophomore year I started chasing after a girl named Becky. She was very modest which is what I was looking for in a woman. I was very cautious in how I approached her. She didn’t reject my advances toward her but kept her distance.

In the Spring of 1991, I learned she was going on an overseas student missionary trip for a year. This seemed like a good idea to me so I signed up for a year-long student missionary trip to Taiwan. I figured we could pick up where we left off when we got back.

Then I fell in love with my now wife LaVonna Silcox.  3 weeks after we started dating, I went on the mission trip to Taiwan.  We maintained a long distance relationship during that time.

When I got back home a year later, I finished my college degree.  LaVonna went to school at the local community college and worked in the community.

On June 1994, I moved out of the dorm and into a room in a lady’s house in Walla Walla—only ¼ mile from LaVonna’s apartment. Now that I was on my own, I decided to get involved in a church. I was looking for a church that matched what we believed.

When I was in Taiwan, LaVonna wrote in her letters to me about how she visited a few churches in the Walla Walla area. One of those churches just so happened to be a couple blocks from my house so we started going there. It was pretty charismatic but it proclaimed Jesus and grace like we’d never heard before. The people there really made us feel welcome. We joined a small group and the leader of that small group taught me to drive. We grew closer in our relationship with God and each other.

After I finished my BS in Business Education degree on December 1994. I started looking for a job but had no success. Even though Portland had a better job market for my skills, I wanted to stay in Walla Walla with LaVonna. I finally got a job bagging groceries and stocking shelves at Wade’s Harvest Foods.

At first, I was pretty upset with God. But, like Joseph in the book of Genesis, God prospered me in that job. My boss soon promoted me to run the Dairy department and the entire store point-of-sale computer system. I had no idea how God would use that and succeeding jobs to bless my career.

Chapter 5
Early Marriage (1996 - 2005)

On January, 1996, after much encouragement from our church mentors, we got engaged. We wanted to make sure our marriage would last so we got into some intense pre-marital counseling.  After a while, we were so excited about getting married, we bumped up our wedding day 2 months.  On October 26, 1996, we got married.  Click/Tap here to read our wedding vows.

A couple of weeks before our wedding, the owner of the store I was working at announced that he was closing the store and in a few weeks, all of us employees would be laid off. It was humbling to face my new in-laws virtually unemployed. However, a couple weeks after our wedding, I was hired as a night supervisor at Loney’s Harvest Foods.

I worked there for 6 months. Even though my salary there was minimal, our combined income allowed us to save enough money to buy a car. We decided it was time to move to a place where I could find a job that utilized my computer skills. So we decided to move to Boise, Idaho. It had a thriving economy and culture but was not too big.

On April, 1999 I started working as an associate technical support specialist for Cougar Mountain Software. I started supporting its point-of-sale software. Cougar Mountain Software was key in helping us through the storm we would soon endure.

God continued to bless my work and gave me favor with the Director of Product Development. On October 2000, I started as an associate programmer. God really prospered me there and I was involved in developing some key software products.  My salary there increased quite considerably. Soon, I was able to support a family on my own salary which allowed LaVonna the freedom to not have to work as hard and be able to stay home when our baby arrived.  On March 4, 2002, Grace Jessie Ringering came into our lives.

A couple years later we started to notice that Gracie was missing developmental milestones. She wasn’t talking and was not sleeping through the night. At the time, we didn’t know about my early childhood, but looking back at it now, she was developing the same as I when I was her age.

On May 2005, God blessed us with an inheritance so we were able to purchase our home in Meridian. It was just the right home for us and in the best part of town. At the time, we didn’t realize how God had picked it because it’s perfect for a person in a wheelchair which I would be in in a few months.

Even though God was blessing us in all ways, I didn’t believe that God would take care of us in the future. I was working a lot of overtime at work because I was always afraid of losing my job even though I had earned the respect of my boss and co-workers. I felt that if I lost my job that I wouldn’t be able to find another programming job, we would run out of money and end up homeless. As a result, I ended up neglecting LaVonna and Gracie.

I feared God instead of seeing Him as a loving Father who takes care of His children. This gave the devil an open door which he used to bring the biggest storm into our lives.

Chapter 6
The Accident (Thursday, September 1, 2005)

It was a beautiful Tuesday when we left on our vacation to Montana. Hurricane Katrina had struck the Gulf Coast the previous day and I was worried what the consequences would be to the country. We drove from Boise to McCall then to Lewiston, Idaho and spent the night there.

The next day, as we were driving through Lewiston, Idaho, I noticed gas prices jumping up. I got worried that a gas shortage would get us stuck in a small town without gas, so I decided to cut our vacation a day short. Instead of driving north to Sandpoint, Idaho, then over to Kalispell, Montana, then over to Great Falls, Montana and then south to Butte, Montana in 2-3 days, we would instead drive straight to Butte, Montana in 1 day. That night we pulled into Butte at 11:00 PM.

I don’t recall being especially tired when I woke up the next morning. Our plan was to drive to Bozeman, Montana (about an hour and a half away), visit with family for a few hours, then drive back to Butte, spend the night there, and then drive back to Boise the next day. We left half our belongings in our motel room in Butte when we left for Bozeman.

It was about 1:00 PM.  The sky was clear and the air was  warm. We were about 10 miles west of Bozeman on eastbound Interstate 90 in the left lane. LaVonna and our then 3 year-old daughter Gracie were fast asleep. We were going about 80 miles per hour in our little 1996 Ford Aspire subcompact car (I barely could fit inside it) when I too nodded off. (Before this time, in 10 years of driving, I had never fallen asleep while driving—even at night or when tired.)

I awoke when our left tires started grinding in the dirt of the freeway’s fringe. I panicked and started screaming. I jerked the steering wheel to the right which sent our car into the middle of the freeway. (The traffic there was pretty heavy.) I jerked the steering wheel to the left. This sent our car into the median. (which was a grassy area about 20 yards wide and a few feet below the level of the freeway. The car rolled 3 times and stopped right side up next to oncoming traffic. 

There just so happened to be an off-duty sheriff deputy following us (I personally believe he was an angel) and saw the whole scene. He immediately pulled over, called 911, and rushed down to us and held my head in place. I awoke to the deputy holding my head and saying, “Don’t move your head!” I remember that I couldn’t move my legs or my fingers. I asked, “Is my wife OK?”

“Yes.”

“Is my daughter OK?”

“Yes.”

After that, I have no memory until 7 days later.

Chapter 7
Intro To Quadriplegia (September, 2005)

The majority of this chapter is based on accounts given to me by LaVonna and my mother.  I have very limited memory of this time.

The firefighters used cutters to cut off the door and get me out of the car. I was taken to Bozeman Deaconess Hospital. At the time, it was a small hospital and didn’t have the resources necessary to handle spinal cord injuries. My C-5 vertebrae in my neck was broken and my spinal cord was damaged. As a result, I was paralyzed from my fingers down. So, it was decided to fly me to the largest hospital in Montana—St. Vincent’s Hospital in Billings, Montana. (about 140 miles east)

LaVonna and Gracie stayed at LaVonna’s sister’s house while her sister traveled to Butte to get the rest of our things. That evening, LaVonna called our friends and family. When my mother heard, she immediately took the next flight from Portland, OR to Billings. The next night, LaVonna and Gracie took a bus from Bozeman to Billings to be with me.  LaVonna did not have a driver’s license at that time.

I underwent a spinal cord fusion surgery to fuse my C5 vertebrae to my C6 vertebrae.  After surgery, once the anesthetic wore off, I went berserk.  I would flail my arms around and try to pull out the various medical tubes that were in my body.  Out of concern for my safety, I was put into a medically-induced coma and a tracheotomy was inserted into my throat.

After a few days, LaVonna and Gracie got sick and could not visit me in the hospital anymore.  Gracie was having a difficult time in the hospital environment so they flew back to Boise. It was about this time that I “awoke”. Even though I had been “conscious” most of the time before, I didn’t remember anything.

A couple days later, I came down with a severe fever. The doctors and nurses couldn’t find the cause and couldn’t get it to come down. My mother telephoned LaVonna and told her I was in serious condition. LaVonna immediately started calling everyone she knew at church and asked them to pray for me.

I remember that night I had a dream where I saw everyone at our church praying for me (At the time, I didn’t know my mother had called LaVonna.) Then the Lord told me that the devil had sought to take my life but God had a plan to use my programming code for His glory. When I awoke the next morning, the fever was completely gone. Thank You, Jesus!

A few days later, my father flew to Billings to be with my mother and me. I really enjoyed and appreciated his company.

The next problem was how to get me back to a hospital in Boise (About 650 miles away) where all my friends and family were. At first, my health insurance company wouldn’t allow it, but after a lot of prayer and pushing on my health insurance company from my employer, I was flown to St. Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise.

When I first arrived in Boise, we were very optimistic about my condition. We believed God would soon heal me and I would be playing with Gracie and typing with my fingers soon. Our church and my employer joined forces and raised over $20,000 to help with getting my house ready for me to live in.  God is so good!

By December the reality of my condition began to sink in that I was going to remain a quadriplegic for the foreseeable future.  I fell into a deep depression. I was then sent to the Sunbridge nursing home facility.

 

Chapter 8
In The Nursing Home (January, 2006)

Because our house wasn’t yet quite wheelchair accessible, I had to live in a nursing home. I was the most depressed while I was there. All the activities were designed for people twice my age. I would spend most of my time lying in bed not doing anything. I wouldn’t watch TV or listen to any music. I would just lay in bed and snooze.  My therapists and my pastor would constantly push me to watch TV, but there was nothing on that interested me.

I felt like my life was over. I couldn’t sleep in a bed other than a hospital bed which meant I couldn’t be close with LaVonna. I couldn’t hold or play with Gracie. I couldn’t use a computer which meant I couldn’t write programming code which I felt meant that my computer programming career was over. I couldn’t feed myself. Someone had to, at the minimum, take care of all my daily needs.

When people would come to visit me, I would be completely unresponsive. I wasn’t upset, I just had nothing to share. My life went from one do-nothing day to the next. I was put on an anti-depressant but it did little to help.

I remember my first roommate.  His name was Jerry.  He was quite aged and mostly deaf, but he was the happiest person there.  He would spend most of the day lying in bed and talking to himself.  When the nurses and CNAs would come in to take care of him, he would crack jokes and have fun.  We didn’t talk much but I think he knew that I was feeling depressed so he left me alone.  His grown children and grandchildren would visit him and they always had a good time.

Soon, I got an electric wheelchair which allowed me to tilt back and snooze without having to be transferred to bed. (The purpose of tilting back is to relieve pressure on my bottom to prevent pressure sores.)

After spending 3 months at the nursing home, I went to Elks Rehabilitation Hospital. (now St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Hospital) It’s the best rehab facility in the area. Unfortunately, I was so depressed that I didn’t really try at the therapy sessions. As a result, I was let go after 3 weeks but I got some adaptive equipment which I now use to operate my computer.

I went back to the Sunbridge nursing home.  There, I got a new roommate.  His name was Lester.  He was a direct polar opposite of Jerry.  He had 10 times the filthiest mouth I’d ever heard.  He would constantly fight the nurses and aides.  When the aides would come in to do my bowel care, he would barge in on us without care for my privacy.  He had a mean and selfish attitude.  In the dining room, he would steal from and bully other residents and me.  Looking back, I feel sorry for him.  He was in hell already as far as I could tell.

I hated being around Lester.  Since he spent most of his time in our room, sometimes with secular rock music playing, I would hang out in the hallway and just tilt back and vegetate.  Many times, various staff would criticize me.  “Peter, what are you doing?  Counting the holes in the ceiling tiles?  How many holes are in that one?  You need to get up and do something.”

The problem was that I had nothing better to do. And I wasn’t counting holes.  I was figuring out the pattern of the holes.  I figured out that the ceiling tiles had the same pattern.  What made them seem random is they were placed in different rotations.

During that time, I was getting a severe bladder infection every month.  My fever would spike to 105 degrees.  I was on antibiotics constantly.  I wasn’t getting enough water.  The problem was that I could not drink water without help and the aides were too busy helping other residents.  When I was given water, it would be in a small cup.  I was constantly being harassed by the nurses to drink more water.

After spending an additional 3 months at the nursing home, I finally could go home. My depression lingered, however. I would stay in bed until 12:00 noon, tilt back in my chair during the day, and go to bed at 8:30 PM. As much as LaVonna and Gracie tried to get me involved in family life, I remained withdrawn.

Chapter 9
Judgement and Condemnation (2007)

It was about this time that Gracie was diagnosed as very high on the Autism spectrum. She was nearly 4 years old and wasn’t speaking, wasn’t able to digest any kind of food except baby food and wasn’t anywhere near potty-trained. She would have meltdowns (resulting from Sensory Overload) during the day and most nights. With having to manage the house and take care of Gracie and me, LaVonna got completely overwhelmed.

We soon had a group from our church come to help LaVonna with Gracie and run the house. Things went well at first but soon a couple ladies started pushing LaVonna to do some parenting procedures on Gracie that LaVonna felt Gracie was not ready for yet.  For example, they pushed LaVonna to put regular underwear on Gracie and to not use diapers even though Gracie was not using the toilet independently.  They said that that would motivate Gracie to use the toilet.  The problem was that Gracie couldn’t understand her body signals.

Since I never defended myself much less LaVonna and I didn’t listen to LaVonna, I agreed with the church ladies and would try to push LaVonna into doing what they said. This created a wedge in our marriage. I would get mad at LaVonna every time Gracie had a meltdown which also added a lot of stress to our marriage.

Then one day, our group (which consisted of about 8 people) sat down in our dining room.  The two ladies told us they were going to turn us into the state child protection services agency and recommend that Gracie be taken out of our home and placed into foster care.  (They were going to do so without telling us but our pastor insisted that they must tell us before calling the state.)

Now I’ve seen LaVonna cry before.  I remember her weeping at her dad’s funeral and at her mom’s funeral.  But I’ve never, NEVER EVER seen her cry and weep like she did on that day.  She felt rejected and condemned.  I just sat there in disbelief.  To be honest, I was mad at the church ladies on the inside but I did nothing outwardly to defend LaVonna.

This whole situation planted a seed in me which would soon bring forth fruit that almost destroyed our marriage.

 

When the case worker from child protective services came over, she examined Gracie, evaluated our home environment and concluded that Gracie was in a stable home environment but needed help.  Over time, with much developmental and speech therapy and by divine help, Gracie quickly developed and grew into a happy and contented young lady.

Chapter 10
Pandemonium (2008)

Because I have long legs, my electric wheelchair is about an inch higher than most other chairs. This means I can not fit under most tables and desks which meant I couldn’t feed myself or use my computer. A couple friends from church and my dad got together and built a special computer desk that was compatible with my wheelchair. Instead of doing nothing, In the evenings, I started playing games and watching Fox News and MSNBC videos online. During the afternoon, I would tilt back and listen to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity on the radio.

Around the time of the 2008 Financial Crisis, I developed a serious urinary tract infection which landed me in the hospital. While laying in bed, I watched the 2008 Financial Crisis and U.S. Presidential election unfold on the Fox News Channel. It was all doom and gloom. I thought for sure my world was coming to an end. I thought Barack Obama would usher in Communism and I would end up homeless. I imagined being in my electric wheelchair trying to fend for myself on the street.

I started losing sleep. I would lay in bed all night moaning, “Oh God, save me!” I felt like God was condemning me for what I perceived as LaVonna’s faults in parenting Gracie and not managing the household right. I started ordering LaVonna around and making demands on her.

The seeds of discord in our home soon spread to my caregivers.  They began to also tell me behind LaVonna’s back that she was not good for this house.  They would point out to me various things that she was doing that they thought was wrong.  Eventually things came to a head and they wanted me to force her to leave our home and leave Gracie here.

That evening LaVonna decided to go to the store and pick up a few things.  She wanted to take Gracie with her.  I thought she was planning on leaving us completely and take Gracie with her.  I protested.  I said she could go to the store but Gracie had to stay here.  She then decided to stay home and make do what we already had.

Eventually, I decided that it was my caregivers that were the problem and I wanted to save our marriage so I fired them.

Chapter 11
Mania (2009)

Now, I started having thoughts that I was going to be dead in a year and I would be in hell.

I went to my general physician and told him all my fears and anxieties. He decided to double the dosage of my anti-depressant. This sent my anxiety skyrocketing. I would writhe in bed all night screaming and crying. Poor LaVonna was beside herself trying to find help for me. I would often call her in for help in the middle of the night. As a result, she got very little sleep at night and would often go to the library during the day to catch up on sleep.

On Earth Day, 2009, I woke up in the morning thinking Jesus had come again and I had been left behind. I was anxious and restless all day. That night I was in bed listening to a Christian music radio station when I heard the song “Blink” By Revive.  I thought that song was for me, that I was going to die, I had lost my salvation and I was going to hell.

I kept hearing one song after the next with the same message. I felt like I was starting down a long staircase down to hell. I was screaming and wailing “I DID IT!” and “IT’S OVER!” LaVonna didn’t know what to do so she started praying for me.

After a few hours, just as I felt I was about to cross the threshold into hell’s flames, Jesus came to me and said that it was not the end of the world, He had not come back, that I was not going to hell and that I was safe in His hands. Over the next few hours I slowly started to recover and calm down.

LaVonna called various friends and family desperate to find out what could be done for me. When they would come to visit and counsel me, I would tell them how LaVonna wasn’t doing things right and that God was condemning me for it. My caregiver was consulting with my doctor about my medications and called the local mental hospital but they didn’t have the resources to help quadriplegic patients like me.

When I fell asleep on New Years Eve of 2009, I suddenly slipped into what I can only describe as a microsecond of hell.  It was like my whole body was writhing in pain a million times worse than I had ever experienced.  I screamed “JESUS!” and then I woke up.

Chapter 12
Deception (2010 - 2016)

I landed in the hospital again. This time it was due to Over-hydration. (I didn’t think a person could drink too much water.) When I got into my hospital room, I turned on the TV to channel 3 to see what was on TV. For the longest time and even now, channel 3 is the TV Guide channel, but for some reason, at that point in time, it was Daystar TV—a Christian broadcasting station. It was just then when Joseph Prince came on the air preaching grace.

I had never heard the grace message expressed in such a way before. He preached Christ from the Old Testament and the New Testament. His knowledge and understanding of Greek and Hebrew (the languages of the Bible) surpassed that of any preacher I had heard before.

Even though it seemed like he had a fresh revelation from God, over time we grew to learn that Joseph Prince, like most TV preachers, is a false prophet.  Jesus warns in Matthew 24:24 that in the last days, many false prophets will arise, performing many signs and wonders, and lead many astray—if possible, even sincere Christians like us.

One example of Joseph Prince’s false gospel: he is the tenth richest pastor in the world.  Unlike most good pastors, he charges for his sermons.  Yes, it is a small price, but it quickly adds up to a large sum.  (Our current pastor has over 300 sermons online that can be viewed anytime for free.)

When I got home, I was still in a manic state and there were a few more manic incidents but God got us through them. Soon, LaVonna got me a referral to the psychiatrist who had previously diagnosed Gracie with Autism. He quickly diagnosed me with Bi-polar disorder, drastically cut my anti-depressant medication and got me on the correct medication.  That stabilized my mood swings and brought order in our home environment.

During this time, I spent a lot of time tilting back in my chair and listening to sermons from various TV preachers.

I soon developed a pressure ulcer on my bottom.  It went all the way to the bone.  To heal it, I was ordered to spend 22 hours a day flat on my back in bed.  At most, I spent 18 hours a day in bed.  I couldn’t stand being away from my family for so long, and I would get bored.

Soon I had to get a muscle flap surgery to heal the ulcer.  After the surgery, I had to spend 24 hours a day in bed for 6 weeks straight.  I then got a TV in my bedroom which kept me entertained.  When the 6 weeks were finished, the ulcer was completely healed.

Programming technology advanced and dramatically came down in price over the past many years which allowed me to start programming again at about the same speed I programmed before my accident. Before my accident, I wrote a couple programs for my family in Microsoft Visual C++. Over the next few years, I converted them to Microsoft Visual C#.

I took some online programming courses and learned the latest software development technology.  I used the knowledge I learned to develop the software components that are on this web site.

Chapter 13
Salvation (2017 - Present)

In January of 2017, I had a relapse of mental illness.  It was during the time of “Snowmageddon” when the Boise area received 2 feet of snow.  Snow was piling on our roof and ice dams were forming on our eves.  I thought for sure that our roof was about to collapse.  But the snow soon melted and there was no damage to our home.

In June of 2017, I then developed another pressure ulcer on my bottom.  I spent 3 months at Vibra Hospital in Boise recovering from another muscle flap surgery and rehabilitation.

After I got out of the hospital, I slumped into a period of depression.  I spent most of my time watching movies online.

In August, 2019, I started writing RingSoft.DbLookup.WPF.  I finished Version 1 in June, 2020.  I then started writing RingSoft.DataEntryControls.WPF and finished in April, 2021.  I modified DbLookup to be based off DataEntryControls.

I decided to be baptized after re-dedicating my life to Christ and repenting of my sinful life.

As of June, 2021, I’m in the process of utilizing Idaho Vocational Rehabilitation Services and getting a part-time job to suppliment my disability income and be productive.