Author: Falling into Place, (2013)
					Emmy-award winning news correspondent, CBS
					Good Morning America Special  Correspondent and substitute anchor
					Correspondent and substitute anchor, CBS  This Morning
					First Native American newscaster
					Has reported for 48 Hours,  Street Stories, Sunday Morning, CBS Radio, CBS Special Reports, the Early Show,  and CBS Evening News
					Graduate: University of Minnesota
					One of 7 siblings:  John, Lilly, Anni, Carla, Carlotta and Claudia
					Mother of 2 grown children
					Married to Rick 
									 			
			 
			
			
					 
		
		
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		Falling  into Your Rightful Place
		
		By 
  The 700 Club
      
		
		
		
		CBN.com - THE  RESERVATION AND THE PROJECTS
Hattie started life on the Nez Perce  Indian reservation in Idaho with 6 other siblings.  When she was 4 years old, Hattie’s parents  moved the family to Seattle.  Often her  parents would get drunk and leave the children alone and hungry.  Sometimes they would leave for a night or a  week so they learned to take care of themselves and each other.  Once when the kids were left alone, Hattie  opened the fridge and found an empty jam jar.   She scraped the smudge of purple at the bottom and gulped it down. She  felt guilty for not sharing.  Sometimes  her brother John would pray before they ate their “mush.”  The kids joined hands to pray.  Hattie copied what her older siblings were  doing.  “I would like to believe that God  [will] take care of us,” says Hattie.   “But my idea of God [then] is pretty empty.”  When she was 5, Hattie’s parents moved the  family to the projects in Seattle in search of a better life.  Instead of getting better, life got  worse.  “None of us imagined it was  possible to live on less than nothing,” says Hattie.
		When she was 7, Hattie’s Aunt Teddy  taught her the Psalm 23.  She also taught  Hattie to pray simple prayers. She says the Psalm finally made sense to her  when she was around 10.  She started to  pray, even when Aunt Teddy was not at the house.  By the time she was 15, Hattie was disgusted  by her Aunt’s attempts to share her faith.   One day, Aunt Teddy called and all the children gathered around the  phone in the living room.  Hattie  whispered harshly into the phone, “I don’t want the white man’s God.”  By rejecting Aunt Teddy’s God, Hattie pushed  away the only person who had consistently been kind to her. 
		By the time the youngest sibling was  in middle school, Hattie’s parents had settled down.  Their father was working; their mom stayed  home with the kids.  They were out of the  projects and in their second home.  Yet  these were still the parents who failed Hattie during her formative years.  “No wonder I grew up to be a reporter, one  who seeks information and is driven to find answers that might help make sense  of situations that make no sense at all,” says Hattie. 
        “HE  WAS THERE ALL ALONG”
  Though she rejected the “white man’s  God,” Hatties says He was there in her life all along.  “My life is a powerful story of God’s pursuit  and how we are loved [by Him] through it all,” she says.  One day when she was in fifth grade, Hattie’s  family had just moved into a house.   After the first day, Hattie wandered outside and saw a withering,  near-dead tree.  She climbed the tree and  saw something golden in the branches: a peach!   She picked the peach and ate it on the gnarled tree branch, dropping the  pit to the ground.  When she ran in to  tell her family they had a peach tree, they didn’t believe her.  The tree never bore another piece of fruit  and eventually Hattie’s dad chopped it down.   “I didn’t tell anyone about God’s embrace,” she says.  “That fruit I keep to myself.”  
        In 8th grade, Hattie  received a scholarship for prep school in Connecticut.  In her second year, Hattie stole  silverware from the dining hall to send back  to her family.  After she was caught,  Hattie asked to go home.  Then in high  school, a community leader encouraged Hattie to go to college.  He said, “We don’t need more Indian dropouts;  we need more Indian graduates.”
         Hattie married Sonny at 18 and had 2  children.  They were divorced at 25 and  then Hattie married for a second time at the age of 35. After 17 years of  marriage, her husband asked for a divorce.   She was shocked.  One day in 2007  while in Los Angeles covering the Oscars, Hattie began meditating in her hotel  room.  She felt a palpable sensation of a  hand touching the top right side of her head.   “I felt I’d been blessed in some way,” says Hattie.  “Whatever it was, I wanted more of it.”  Hattie went to church the next day and took  communion.  Then she felt the touch on  the right side of her head again.  “The invisible  had become real, [here] in the house of God,” says Hattie.  She knew God was real. After 4 months of  stressing about her divorce, Hattie felt a sense of peace and contentment.  She felt empowered not just spiritually but  emotionally and physically.  
        Hattie went to college and began  broadcasting on college radio at the University of Minnesota. Then she moved to  Seattle at 26 and anchored for KING 5 News where she won 4 Emmy awards. In 1987  began at ABC’s Good Morning America as special correspondent and substitute  anchor.  In 1990 Hattie moved to CBS  where for two decades, she reported for 48 hours, Street Stories, Sunday  Morning, etc.
        Today Hattie, 58, is semi-retired  and spends her time writing and speaking.   She is a supporter of education for Native American children.  Aunt Teddy died in 1972 from breast  cancer.  Hattie’s mother passed away in  1988.  John died in 1990 and her father  died in 2001.   
        Hattie is involved in small groups  in her church.  One day, she met Rick in  church and they were married in 2009.
      
		
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