Dear God, if I can work tirelessly to become the kind of person my Dog thinks I am, it would seem you would be well pleased.
If I fall seven times, please give strength to rise eight.
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Five daily blogs about life's 5 big choices on five different sites.
Dear God, if I can work tirelessly to become the kind of person my Dog thinks I am, it would seem you would be well pleased.
If I fall seven times, please give strength to rise eight.
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Dear Son, you don’t have to be good at anything. No one does. Everything is a choice. I’ve discovered five big ones: Mind, Body, Spirit, Money and HQ.
It’s simple. We’re only as strong as our weakest link. In physics, and in life. Be careful, and, good luck.
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Life is Good store at JFK airport, Mother’s Day 2011…
Life is good, right? And life’s a bit@h (you know the saying, and then you die).
We get to choose which way we lean.
Another day above ground, it seems to me anyway, is a good thing.
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Happy Thanksgiving. We’ll begin this Thanksgiving morning as we have for 11 years, delivering Food For Families. It’s a Christmas and Easter tradition as well.
Finding symbolic ways to create strategic traditions, to teach life lessons.
Without the repetition, the teaching, and the lesson, may get lost.
Adults need strategic traditions to teach the profoundly simple lesson that life is about two simple choices – to be thankful for everything, or to not be.
We were very sorry to see our life savings disappear.
But we are very thankful we had a life savings to spend.
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Today is the first day back to school for many Central Florida children. And all across the Country, students of all ages are gearing up. Many of our friends (the same age) have college seniors.
Some have grandchildren.
We have a 4th grader.
The conversation last night revolved around the fundamental difference between being smart and being wise. Here’s the moral.
Being smart can help you understand that there are low to no-interest loans available to buy stuff. Being wise helps you understand that unless you have cash, you should wait.
Being smart tells you your parents will never know you tried to smoke a cigarette. Being wise tells you smoking is bad news, period.