Joel (Spanish-language Edition)

Joel (Spanish-language Edition)

Joel (Spanish-language Edition)

Joel (Spanish-language Edition)

Paperback(Spanish-language Edition)

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Overview

Joel Sonnenberg solo tenía dos años cuando un camión de dieciocho ruedas chocó contra el auto de su familia. En el infierno que siguió su cuerpo se quemó en más de un ochenta y cinco por ciento. Esta es su historia como solo él puede contarla. Experimente el mundo desde la perspectiva de Joel, mientras lo lleva a una travesía personal con más trama que una película de Hollywood. Su vida ha sido de grandes logros y sufrimientos. Prepárese para enamorarse de este joven llamado Joel.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780829745955
Publisher: Vida
Publication date: 09/04/2006
Edition description: Spanish-language Edition
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.75(d)
Language: Spanish
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Gregg Lewis es autor y coautor galardonado de más de cincuenta libros, incluyendo Arriésgate y Visión Global con Ben Carson, Tom Landry: Una autobiografía, Jesús M.D., y A salvo en casa. Él y su esposa, Deborah, tienen cinco hijos y residen en Rome, Georgia.

Read an Excerpt

Joel


By Joel Sonnenberg Gregg Lewis

Zondervan

Copyright © 2004 Zondervan
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-310-24693-8


Chapter One

What happened to you? That's the first thought that pops into our minds when we see a person with a cast. If we don't ask it, we at least think it.

I feel like I've lived my whole life wearing a huge, permanent cast with a lot of names written all over it. Everyone who meets me, everyone who sees me, wonders, What happened to you?

Rarely a day goes by that I don't hear this question. Some days many times.

Those people who don't come right out and ask still wonder. I can see the question in their eyes and in their reactions-their awkwardness, their silence, their double takes, and their stares. If people don't wonder about me and my story when they meet me, I worry about them. While I try not to take offense if they look at me strange, I definitely look at them strange if they don't.

I can never hide the fact that I'm different. So my response to their What happened? question is very often my introduction to people. I've learned that this can be good, or it can be bad-depending on how the story is told. Which is why I began speaking to groups.

Some people act surprised that I'm not too nervous to get up in front of large crowds. In part it's because I know that when I walk into any public situation-whether it's a roomful of twenty partygoers, an auditorium with five thousand people, or a prime-time television show that has millions of viewers-everyone is going to be looking at me anyway. It's only when I'm given the chance to step in front of a microphone or stand up on a stage and share my experience that I have any control over how people look at me or what they think about me. So I actually feel more comfortable in a public-speaking setting where I'm given an opportunity to present myself. It's usually my best chance-sometimes my only chance-to ease the awkwardness, to help people see past the surface so they can understand, or at least accept, me for who I am.

I was not gifted with an incredible athletic talent like Michael Jordan or Tiger Woods. I'm not a musical prodigy who mastered an instrument by the age of six. Nor am I an intellectual genius who learned calculus by kindergarten or graduated from medical school by the age of sixteen. I certainly don't have the imagination or creativity of people like Bill Gates or George Lucas.

There is nothing superhuman about me. I'm just an ordinary person-with an unusual story that in one way or another seems to have an impact on every interaction in my life. Depending on how I choose to respond, this impact can be either positive or negative.

Some mornings I'd much rather sleep in than get up and face the battle of another day. Sometimes I tire of watching and envying people around me who are going through their comfortable daily routine, because what happened to me has determined that my daily life is anything but routine. I have been forced to cope by expecting the unexpected for so long that dealing with surprise has become commonplace for me. I live every day of my life outside the box, consciously trying to change the paradigm, in every interaction with others, to prove that things are not always what they seem. Others' preconceived ideas and false expectations are my constant battleground.

There are occasions when what happened to me becomes a barrier that separates me from other people. But there are also occasions when it has a positive impact on my relationships.

Because many people initially react to me with uncertainty and awkwardness, I'm often forced to tell enough of my story to answer unspoken questions and put people at ease. I've also learned to take the initiative in friendship and to be the first one to speak whenever I meet someone new. In this way I am forced to become more outgoing with others.

Knowing what happened often gives other people an unusual sense of intimacy with me. It makes me seem more transparent and therefore more approachable in many people's minds. I'm constantly humbled by how open and trusting, even vulnerable, many people are when they talk to me. So many hurting people seem to identify with me because of what happened.

We all know that our words, our attitudes, and our actions influence others. But I'm regularly reminded of this when someone comes up to me and says something like, "Joel, I've never forgotten what you told me that time we were having lunch together at McDonald's. It made such an impact on me." And I'll have no recollection of what they're talking about. For them it was some life-impacting conversation; I was just eating a hamburger.

Stuff like that happens to me all the time. When it does, I'm reminded that what happened to me years ago makes me an example to others.

Not only am I forced to tell my story every day, but any person who has a relationship with me may be forced to tell it as well. Why? Because other people ask them, "What happened to Joel?" As a result, in some peculiar way, my story becomes the story of those around me. Which means it's been told a lot. At least in part.

I've watched portions of my life reenacted on television. I've read other parts in newspapers and magazines. I've shared bits and pieces of my personal history with many acquaintances over the years. I've sat in front of TV cameras and stood on stage before live audiences to talk about my experience. But this book marks the first time I've ever told, from my perspective, the whole story of what happened. And I'm excited about the opportunity because I expect new friends, strangers, and people I've known for years, and even my family, will gain new insights-not just into my story but also into me. And into life.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Joel by Joel Sonnenberg Gregg Lewis Copyright © 2004 by Zondervan. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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