>>> I figured the weather had something to do with everyone being AWOL. Lol as it should be! I was outside all day …. >>>
You know for me personally I’d rather have my hands in dirt, pulling weeds, “cleaning up” and “prettying up” a flower bed than reading the disgusting news that is in abundance at every site I go to.
I feel torn. I want to be aware but being aware is very depressing. To those who balk and say we can’t stop fighting - I say “horse feathers”. Reading news and being keyboard warriors is NOT FIGHTING the evil. It’s merely sharing info with the choir and we are all at this point singing a mournful tune.
“I feel torn. I want to be aware but being aware is very depressing. To those who balk and say we can’t stop fighting - I say “horse feathers”. Reading news and being keyboard warriors is NOT FIGHTING the evil. It’s merely sharing info with the choir and we are all at this point singing a mournful tune”
Very well put Dolly. On both aspects.
Very long but really fascinating.
Tucker Carlson’s interview with Hunter Biden’s psychiatrist who also had one of Hunter’s laptops.
Not live as it was yesterday.
Tucker Carlson Tonight LIVE NOW🔴3/13/24 | Tucker Carlson Tonight March 13, 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMHw-5ZgGlA
Going to be gone most of the day visiting with oldest daughter.
I’ve been out too - using the last 3 days coming out of hybernation ( takes awhile of stretching etc. Ha!)...so today am well on the move prepping the deck for Spring with all it’s furnishings, it’s really another room as I’m out there often in warm weather. And entertain company there too. But needs a good cleaning first.
I no longer read all the day to day issues - I now check for the final results of whatever’s going on rather than get my pants in a knot very day. A brief overview is good enough to stay informed.
” Reading news and being keyboard warriors is NOT FIGHTING the evil. It’s merely sharing info with the choir and we are all at this point singing a mournful tune.”
I completely agree with you.
Bible in a Year :
I have seen a grievous evil under the sun: wealth hoarded to the harm of its owners.
As Dust Bowl sandstorms ravaged the United States during the Great Depression, John Millburn Davis, a resident of Hiawatha, Kansas, decided to make a name for himself. A self-made millionaire with no children, Davis might have invested in charity or economic development. Instead, at great expense, he commissioned eleven life-size statues of himself and his deceased wife to stand in the local cemetery.
“They hate me in Kansas,” Davis told journalist Ernie Pyle. Local residents wanted him to fund the construction of public facilities like a hospital, swimming pool, or park. Yet all he said was, “It’s my money and I spend it the way I please.”
King Solomon, the wealthiest man of his day, wrote, “Whoever loves money never has enough,” and “as goods increase, so do those who consume them” (Ecclesiastes 5:10–11). Solomon had grown keenly aware of the corrupting tendencies of wealth.
The apostle Paul also understood the temptation of wealth and chose to invest his life in obedience to Jesus. Awaiting execution in a Roman prison, he wrote triumphantly, “I am already being poured out like a drink offering . . . . I have finished the race, I have kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:6–7).
What lasts isn’t what we chisel in stone or hoard for ourselves. It’s what we give out of love for each other and for Him—the One who shows us how to love. .
Reflect & Pray
What will others remember about you? What changes might you need to make as you ponder your eternal legacy?
Heavenly Father, please help me pour out my life for others in some small way today.