Friday, January 23, 2026

TIPS FOR LOSING WEIGHT FOR SINGLES - OTHERS MAY READ THEM

 

Quite a few people make weight loss a central part of their annual "new year's resolution" and then fail after losing a pound or two and then putting them back on before they know it because they lack discipline!  I know this to be true because I have been one of those failures more than once! 

Last year, 2025, may be the only exception! Even though it took me all year to lose 30 pounds, about five inches or more in the waist, I managed to keep it off even through the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays! 

Since I am single and live alone, I understand that my situation is very different from most. None of these suggestions will probably work in most homes unless everybody in the house has decided to make the same "new year's resolution" and attempt to lose weight as a group at the same time! Even then, one member of the group could sabotage any group effort by reverting back to their "old ways" by bringing "junk food" into the house!

So, if you live alone or belong to a family weight loss cohort, here are some suggestions that worked for me - at least last year! Take a couple of weeks ahead as a time to plan your beginning month's strategy. 

(1) Put a treadmill in front of a TV and do not allow yourself to watch TV unless you are on that treadmill.
(2) Stay out of the ice cream, candy and bakery aisles at the grocery store. "Lead us not into temptation!" 
(3) Do not clip coupons for such food items as ice cream, candy and bakery items no matter if they are "half-off" or more. 
(4) Do not even bring such tempting food items into the house.
(5) Don't watch pizza and ice cream commercials on TV especially in the evenings when they are back-to-back! Pause the treadmill and take a short break when they come on! Even the "power of suggestion" may be too powerful, especially if you live near a grocery store. 
(6) Allow room for short breaks like inevitable family celebrations where your presence is required, but severely limit your intake of unhealthy choices and large servings. Do some "self-talk" and planning before you go. Choose wisely and do not use it as an occasion to "pig out!" Just one "pig out" session could break your routine and cause you to break your new discipline patterns!         
(7) As I lost weight and began to reach my goal, I got rid of my old clothes that no longer fit so I would not be tempted into easing back into them one pound-at-a-time. 
(8) Keep a journal so you can track your losses and gains and get back on track as fast as you can! 
(9) Pause for a few minutes before every temptation so you have time to "talk yourself out of it" before you eat! 
(10) Keep a supply of raw carrots, celery, turnips and other vegetables in the refrigerator to snack on, as well as other low fat, low carbohydrate, items in case of "temptation attacks."


ON THE OTHER HAND

“Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals, dying of nothing.”
Redd Foxx

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

A REVIVAL OF MY OLD IDEA FOR HELPING KIDS IN THE MISSIONS

"A USED PEN AND PENCIL DRIVE" 

For The Children Attending The Soon-To-Be Finished 
CARDINAL POLYCARP GRADE SCHOOL
Diocese of Tunduru-Masasi
Tanzania, East Africa 
Bishop Filbert Mhasi With Two of  His Diocese's Beautiful And Curious School Children 

Toward the end of last year, working through the Father John Judie Ministries Inc operated by my fellow retired Louisville priest volunteering in the missions of east Africa, I decided to help Bishop Filbert Mhasi find the funds to restart and finish his half-built new Catholic grade school. 
This was what the new school-to-be looked like when work had stopped because the funds ran out. 

Miraculously, we reached that goal on Christmas Eve 2025 about 1:00 pm when the afternoon mail arrived. I had promised to call Bishop Mhasi on Christmas Eve to tell him how close we came to our goal of $82,000.00.  When I told him that we had reached our goal on Christmas Eve, not Easter Sunday as I had first predicted, he was truly blown away! We both consider reaching this milestone a miracle to be attributed to Pope Francis's Sleeping Saint Joseph devotion! 
 
Bishop Mhasi was so eager to re-start the school building that he launched the re-start in a day or two after the first half of the new gifts was wired to him! Bishop Mhasi is a man who can get things done! 
The New Concrete Floor In One Of The Classrooms Was Re-started Right Away
The dry-wall ceiling in another classroom has been re-started after the new funding started arriving. 
With this new funding in place, the re-start of this school building is already coming along quite nicely.  However, after raising the funds for three major building projects in the missions of east Africa last year, including finishing the funding for this school, I have sworn off major building projects for a while so I can focus on some smaller mission efforts!

This has led me to revive an old idea I introduced when I was working in the Caribbean missions. I called it a "Used Pen And Pencil Drive." People collected and gave me over 1,000 used ball point pens and pencils they had retrieved from their kitchen, desk and cabinet drawers at home. Most people were surprised to find so many not being used! 

Now that the new school is on its way to being finished and will hopefully open soon, I would like to focus on gathering some used, or even new for that matter, light-weight school supplies (ball point pens, regular pencils with erasers, color pencils, rulers and so on). Father John Judie has agreed to take them with him in a large suitcase when he returns to Tanzania in March. If you are inspired to help with this easy but needed project, you can arrange a drop-off of your collection of used pens and pencils by texting Father Knott at jrknott@bellsouth.net or by leaving them at his door (address listed below) with his name and your name on the package or bag. He trusts his neighbors to secure them for him if he is not at home. Here is Bishop Mhasi's response to this idea. 

"Fr. Ron, thanks so much for this very good idea of school supplies. Some might take it for granted, but in our area and situation, there are many here who are struggling to get these school supplies like pens, pencils, plastic rulers, erasers and so forth. Fr. John will help us so much to carry these with him in an extra suitcase when he returns to Tanzania."

We have decided that it would NOT be wise to accept writing paper, notebooks and writing tablets because of their weight and crayons  because of the intense heat. The paper would take up too much room in a suitcase and shipping it separately would be way too expensive. Melted crayons would probably not be very useful. In fact, it would be much cheaper for them to buy school paper and crayons over there than for us to ship them from here even if we got them for free.  

On the other hand, if you would like to help them be able to purchase writing paper, crayons and other needed heavy weight classroom supplies over there, you can write a check to Father John Judie Ministries, Inc and send the check to Father Knott for deposit in that account (Father Knott's address is listed below).  Put "For Bishop Mhasi's School"  in the blank memo line at the bottom left side of the check. Here is Bishop Mhasi's response to this offer to promote the need for some help with the heavy weight school supplies that they will need to buy or build over there.   

"Fr. Ron, thanks also for making a financial appeal for securing some heavy-weight school supplies. For the heavy weight items like writing paper, any donation might also help us buy or build chairs and tables (desks) for the students."

Rev. Ronald Knott
1271 Parkway Gardens
#106
Louisville, KY 40217


TWO SUGGESTIONS AND ONE OBSERVATION

1. Invite your extended family members to help you collect these used "sometimes-just-laying-around" school supplies for these kids in need.  

2. If your business gives away pens or pencils for advertising purposes, ask if they have a few they would like to pass on to these mission school kids in need.  (Don't just take them without asking!) 

3. I just know that this is going to be another one of those life-changing mission projects that will empower children and families alike for years to come! I was attracted to this project  because I know and trust Bishop Mhasi personally and I hated to see his half-finished school (a dream of his) just sitting there waiting for some more funds to come in after he had worked so hard to raise the first half of those needed funds! I can't wait to see the day when the kids begin to access this desperately needed new Catholic school. This will not only make the kids happy, but it will make me and the other donors proud and happy as well! As the Book of Proverbs puts it, "Those who water others, will themselves be watered!" 
A Half-Full Suitcase of Light Weight Used Pens, Pencils, Rulers and Pencil Sharpeners That Needs To Be Filled Before Being Hand-Carried By Father John
Heavy Weight Paper That Needs To Be Funded From Here and Purchased Over There
Heavy-Weight Desks That Need To Be Funded From Here and Built Or Bought Over There
PLEASE FORWARD THIS POST TO ANYONE
WHO MIGHT BE INTERESTED


 

 


 

 



 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

ONCE A MISSIONARY, ALWAYS A MISSIONARY?

 One of my twelve trips to the Caribbean Missions in the 32 the islands of the country of St. Vincent and the Grenadines.The new airport in Kingstown, St. Vincent and the Grenadines

I will make you a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth. 
Isaiah 49:3, 5-6

When I saw this line in our first reading today, I came to this conclusion about myself - "once a missionary, always a missionary!" It made we realize that my past actually prepared me for this part of my future as a priest. Let me explain that a bit!

In my first and second grade of primary school (1950-1951), down in Meade County, I remember helping "adopt pagan babies." It was a popular program for children in Catholic schools, whereby we brought our pennies to school to "adopt" a poor child in some mission area so as to help prepare him or her for baptism. Some of you might remember this program from your own childhood. The program was a bit simplistic, but well-intentioned!
A Typical Certificate Granted To Those Who "Adopted Pagan Babies" 

In high school seminary, I made rosaries to send to "the missions." I learned that I could really turn them out quite quickly! I remember making hundreds of them as a high schooler at St. Thomas Seminary, out on old Brownsboro Road, here in Louisville.

In college seminary, I was a member and even an officer in an organization called the Catholic Students Mission Crusade. I am reminded of that fact every time I look at an old photo of me from 1965 when I was a third year college seminarian at Saint Meinrad Seminary. In that photo, I was in the chapel, wearing my first cassock and my official C.S.M.C. ribbon and membership medal around my neck.
As a theology level seminarian, I thought about joining the Glenmary Home Missioners. It is an order of priests, brothers and sisters who work here in the "home missions" of the US, mainly in the south where Catholics are rare. I later decided against it, but as a newly ordained priest, I actually ended up being assigned to the "home missions" of our archdiocese for my first ten years. In my life, at least, God always seems to "get his way" in situations like these!

As a retired priest, I decided to volunteer in the "foreign missions" of the Caribbean especially in the countries of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados and Trinidad. I also volunteered to present workshops for priests, deacons and bishops in Saint Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, The Bahamas and at an annual Antilles Episcopal Conference meeting in Trinidad with bishops from all over the English speaking Caribbean as well as a session with their seminarians and a dinner at the Apostolic Nunciature with the Bishops and the Pope's Apostolic Delegate to the capital city of Port of Spain.  
All in all, I made 12-13 trips down there before the volcano erupted in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and COVID caused me to back off mission work down there for a while.

Year before last, I got involved in the east African countries of Kenya and Tanzania through the Father John Judie Ministries organization started by Father John Judie, one of our local priests, who is spending his retirement serving in Kenya and Tanzania. So far, I have raised enough money to build a new church in Kenya, build a new house for a single mother of two young children and finish a half-built grade school in Tanzania. I also raised enough money to pay off the outstanding debts of six impoverished seminarians in Tanzania so they can finally advance to their next level of seminary. Now that re-starting the building of the new grade school is fully funded and in progress, I have turned my attention to finding new and used "school supplies" for the students who will be attending that new school. (See my blog post for this coming Tuesday 1-20-2026 for details)

I will make you a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth.

The teachings of Vatican II encourage and remind us that "all Christians are called to be missionaries, each in their own unique way." We might think of “missionaries” as only those brave priests or religious people that travel to faraway lands bringing the Gospel to local tribes. That is indeed one aspect, but not the only aspect for living as a missionary. We are challenged today be attentive to that beautiful and vital call and hopefully find a way to answer it. 

Pope Paul VI, who presided over the finish and implementation of Vatican II, wrote extensively about our call to be missionaries. 

Following him, Pope John Paul II explained even further that all baptized Christians are challenged to become missionaries in their everyday lives. In a general audience on April 15, 1998  he reminded us that 'The missionary task of the baptized, in conformity with their  own vocation, was extensively considered by the Second Vatican Council. In the document, Lumen Gentium, it teaches us that each disciple of Christ has the obligation of spreading the faith to the best of his or her ability. In his own encyclical Redemptoris Missio, he stressed yet again that, by virtue of Baptism, all lay people are missionaries.'

The Catechism of the Catholic Church confirms this “missionary mandate” of the lay faithful where it says, “The baptized must profess the faith they have received from God through the Church and participate in the apostolic and missionary activity of the People of God."

Listening to Pope John Paul II does not mean, however, that everyone needs to travel to a faraway land, or stand at every street corner to share the Gospel. The Church believes that being a missionary can take multiple forms, always in accord with a person’s state in life. For example, a person can be a missionary through their marriage, showing others how a faithful, committed marriage is possible in today’s world. Another example is an elderly person confined to their home being a missionary through prayer, offering each day to God and praying for missionaries around the world. 

Pope Francis, in his 2013 Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, said this in #120. "All the baptized, whatever their position in the Church or their level of instruction in the faith, are agents of evangelization, and it would be insufficient to envisage a plan of evangelization to be carried out by professionals while the rest of the faithful would simply be passive recipients. The new evangelization calls for personal involvement on the part of each of the baptized. Every Christian is challenged, here and now, to be actively engaged in evangelization; indeed, anyone who has truly experienced God’s saving love does not need much time or lengthy training to go out and proclaim that love. Every Christian is a missionary to the extent that he or she has encountered the love of God in Christ Jesus."

Pope Francis wisely said, "Every Christian is challenged, here and now, to be actively engaged in evangelization" and "does not need much time or lengthy training to proclaim the love of God he has experienced." Pope John Paul II remined us that this does not mean that everyone needs to travel to a faraway land, or stand at every street corner to share the Gospel. The Church believes that being a missionary can take multiple forms, always in accord with a person’s state in life, each in his own way. 

Yes, you can carry out your duty to be a missionary in your own way. Some personally go to foreign lands. Others support those who do go. Still others follow the news about missionaries and pray for them. Personally, I got involved because I have always seemed to have been a "missionary at heart."  Lately, it has occurred to me that we owe it to mission countries, to do what we can to help with evangelization, especially in those countries who are now sending missionary priests to us because of our own priest shortage. Rather than starting my own mission organization, I decided to partner with another of our Louisville priests who works in east Africa - Father John Judie and his mission organization Father John Judie Ministries, Inc. 

If you too want to get involved in mission work, each in your own way, follow my blog "An Encouraging Word" at fatherknott.com It regularly has stories, opportunities and photos of what Father John Judie and I are doing in east Africa in particular. We use a tax deductible legal system. We send thank you letters. We keep an eye on every penny and make sure it is used faithfully and legally for what the donor intended. We  pay no salaries. We don't even ask people for money. We just tell them what we are doing and tell them if they want to help us do it, they can call us and let us know!  

Here is a story that is typical of many of the "mission stories" I have witnessed. It is a story about the generosity even of the poor themselves. It is one of the main reasons I am "hooked" on helping with mission work. This story comes from Bishop Filbert Mhasi of Tanzania whom I have helped starting last year. He tells the story in his own words, "I went again to one of the mission churches for the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord. After the Mass, one little girl, age 6, came to me and said, "Bishop, will you come again next Sunday? I said, "If I get money for petrol, I will come." She looked at me, and said, "I will give you my sandals, go and sell them and use the money for petrol." She actually gave me her sandals! I was shocked! I said, "No please, don't worry, somebody will give me the money for petrol." She was a bit satisfied! This experience is still circulating into my mind. This poor little angel wanted to give me her sandals! What an amazing and lovely gesture of love and support! So, amazing!"

The great part of doing missionary work is what it does for those who get involved, not just the people they help! As the Book of Proverbs puts it, "Those who waters others, will themselves be watered!


Thursday, January 15, 2026

PLAN IT AND THEN FORGET IT

 

Stay awake! You do not know on which day your Lord will come!
Matthew 24:37-44

 

Have you ever wondered about your own death date? Have you ever let yourself imagine it? Have you made plans for it? I have and I am trying to keep them up-to-date. !  I have a last will and testament and a designated executor. I have a “living will” outlining my wishes about end-of-life issues. Unmarried and childless, I decided against life-insurance. I have a funeral service outlined with readings, music and a priest-homilist (and a back-up) selected.  I have a burial spot ready and a tombstone already erected. Abbey Caskets, over at Saint Meinrad where I used to work, is giving me one of their caskets so I decided against funeral insurance as well. 

 

I have an in-home health care policy that I bought when I turned fifty so I might be spared, for a while at least, going to a nursing home. I have saved all through my ordained life to be able to pay my bills so as not to be a burden to my family, my friends or the archdiocese.  I have gotten annual physicals and monitored my health on a regular basis. Like that old “Ronco Rotisserie Oven” commercial used to put it on TV, I have “set it” and now I want to “forget it.” Having prepared the best that I can for dying, I now want to go on living the best I can, for as long as I can!  

 

Yes, I have my proverbial bags packed. I just don’t know the day or the hour. I have no control over how I will die, but I do have a few hopes about how my life will end. I don’t know if it will be quick and easy or drawn out and painful. I only hope I don't have to suffer. I have never been very good at that! I can’t even handle the flu all that well! Filled with amazement and gratitude, and hopefully free of pain, I pray that I am aware of what is happening so that I can embrace it rather than leave this world kicking and screaming. If it is painful, I pray that I can handle it with dignity and grace, without too much aggravation to those around me.

 

Even though I may have to update these plans every now and then, I plan to go on living with all the passion and energy that I can muster. When I retired, I most certainly did not want to sit in a rocking chair and wait till I died! I did not want to sit around talking about medications, insurance policies, doctor’s appointments and what various nursing homes have to offer. I wanted to “set it and forget it” and have my plans in place so I could forget about them until I needed them! 


I do not want to pamper myself or let myself be pampered! Instead, I want to live simply, recreate myself over and over by doing some things that I have never done. One of those things was to volunteer in the Caribbean Missions where life is hard, where that reality could teach me how good I have it now and how lucky I have been most of my life. After that, I moved on to the missions of east Africa. In retirement, I wanted to keep working so that I could make some extra funds for giving back to others, as I have so generously been given to! So far, so good! I have not pulled out my final plans and looked at them for a couple of years, so now is a good time for a quick review and any needed adjustments if needed. However, a few people do know where those plans are when they will need them! 

 

What about you? Are you brave enough, and have faith enough, to let yourself think about your own death? Are you so in denial that you are willing to stick your family with the burden of what to do with you when you die? Are you wasting the time you have left, just waiting around to die, or are you still reinventing yourself so that you can keep on living a full life as long as you can? Are you doing those things that are necessary to maintain good health or are you still engaged in addictive habits that put your health at risk? Have you talked to your family about end-of- life issues and signed the proper papers that will help them follow your wishes? Are you prepared well enough now to be able to lay your preparations aside and live with passion, intensity and purpose? Are you prepared spiritually to meet your Maker whatever the day or the hour?

 

As we try to live a full and rich life, there are two extremes to be avoided: the failure to think about death on one hand and an obsessive preoccupation with death on the other. Instead of trying to “get ready” at the last minute, or being totally caught off guard, the best approach is to “stay awake,” have "your bags packed" and "keep on living," because you do not know on which day your Lord will come! As Isaiah the Prophet put it to God, "Would that you would meet us doing right and being mindful of your ways!" 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Tuesday, January 13, 2026

THERE ARE NO SHORTCUTS TO A HAPPY LIFE


DEDICATION TO PERSONAL AND VOCATIONAL EXCELLENCE

LOVING YOURSELF AND LOVING WHAT YOU DO


The first ingredient in really loving oneself is a passionate commitment to personal excellence – to loving who you really are - enough to care about becoming your best self. Really loving oneself does not mean papering oneself, but doing hard things for one’s own good. One of the most critical needs here is the need for a capacity for critical and constructive self-awareness. You must be able to know and understand what makes you tick. You must own your own personal history and heal it if necessary. In short, you must be dedicated to becoming your best as a quality human person first. Let me put that another way. (a) You cannot take a loser and ordain him and expect to have an effective priest! If he is not a quality human being to begin with, all you will end up with is a loser priest who can’t relate to people or inspire them to hunger for holiness. (b) You cannot take two losers and put them through a wedding and expect to end up with a happy marriage and effective parents! If they are not quality human beings to begin with, all you will end with is a miserable marriage and disastrous parents!

The second ingredient in really loving oneself is a passionate commitment to vocational excellence – to what you do. In other words, if you are a parent, commit yourself to being the very best parent you can be! If you are married, commit yourself to being the best husband or wife you can be! If you are a priest, commit yourself to be the best priest you can possibly be! Whatever you do, be good at it! If you strive to be the best at what you do, you will get better at it. If you choose the “good enough to get by” path, you will become known for your mediocrity. Without a passionate commitment to vocational excellence, you will no doubt end up being a half-assed priest, a half-assed marriage partner or half-assed parent! The world is already overcrowded with mediocrity – with “half-assedness” - people with no passion for personal or vocational excellence! My mother used to call them “people who merely go through the motions,” “people whose hearts are not in it.” God says to us in Revelations 3:15-16, “Would that you were either cold or hot. So, because you are lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I will vomit you out of my mouth.” May you be spared from half-assedness!”

May you be the very best version of yourself, a person passionately committed to your own personal and vocational excellence, a person committed to becoming your best self and committed to excellence at what you do!