Friday, February 28, 2014

Meatloaf Did Him In

Meatloaf Did Him In

“He stopped loving her today, they placed a wreath upon his door, soon they’ll carry him away, he stopped loving her today.”  George T. Jones. A classic obituary.

**********

     My wife and I are having dinner.  Meatloaf, mashed potatoes, spinach and biscuits. The Heinz ketchup bottle sits upside down. What more could any Southern man want?

     The 7:00 news is over. Conversation lags.  She picks up the newspaper, reads the obituaries. I think it strange. I give it little more than mild curiosity. Who needs chatter with such delicious vittles? …Until she speaks.

     Out of the blue she says, “How shall I announce your passing?” 

     “Passing what? You want me to pass you some more meatloaf?”

     “No. I just want something more creative to announce your demise.”

     My demise? I stop chewing. The mouthful of meatloaf suddenly becomes mush. She looks at me and smiles. “Obituaries are so dull.  Listen, it reads, ‘He died, she passed away, he met his Lord.’ So dreary. How would you like yours to read?”

     Strange thoughts flash through my mind.  Do you know how easy it’d be to kill someone with meatloaf?  Who knows what’s inside of it. Besides, Southern men don’t even chew meatloaf. They’re like dogs.  It’s over the lips, across the tongue, lookout tummy, here it come. Teeth are useless.

     Meatloaves are so large they can disguise all sorts of deadly toxins or lethal devices.  Meatloaf is never served in prison for this reason. Baked inside might be nails, tacks, needles, nuts and bolts, roaches, dirt, glass shards, anything, even fertilizer.  I suddenly feel sick.

     I try to shake it off. “Haven’t thought much about it. Why do you ask?”  She rolls her eyes.  I notice she’s only eating potatoes and spinach.

     “Oh, just wondering. These announcements have no life.”

     “Life? These folks are dead,” I say.

     “They’re so somber.  Who’d want to attend a funeral for someone who had simply ‘passed?’ Nobody. When you go, I want it to be a big event. It’s gonna be hard enough as it is to find pallbearers.”
     She says, “Let’s concoct some good ones for you.  It’ll be too late to think about it when you’re gone. I might be playing bridge! Or it might interfere with Downton Abbey.”

     “Look, I’m feeling great. I don’t wanna think about dying. Why are you in such a rush? Why aren’t you eating your meatloaf?” 

     “Lost my appetite. I see you’re not finishing yours either. Eat up,” she says.

     I suddenly feel ill.  Maybe I should not have had the third helping. Men are gluttonous. 

     She continues. “Time is short. You’re a hack. Embellish yourself for the final day. It’s coming. Make up some creative opening lines for your send-off. I have some suggestions.”

    She asks, “How about, ‘He changed addresses?’ Or maybe, ‘Left us in a rush?’  Since you’re in the real estate business, how about, ‘His loan came due,’ or maybe, ‘He was into dirt, still is’”?

     My death is not a laughing matter. It demands more respect than this. Then I remember Marvin, a funeral director friend of mine. He once told me about someone’s interment.  A large easel with a chalk board stood next to the red-dirt hole.  On the coffin was a pink princess phone.  The message read, “Jesus called!”

     She doesn’t let up. “How about, ‘He lost his lease’, or maybe, ‘Closed his last deal?’”  She looks at her watch, then glances at the cold meatloaf left on my plate. My stomach growls.

     I remember a lawyer friend.  His read, ‘He found no loophole.’ I decide to chime in. Don’t want it to be the last opportunity to glorify myself.  I suggest, ‘He defied gravity.’ She shakes her head.  I continue, ‘He dropped like a dead fly.’ She ignores it.

     She says, “I like,He left us hanging.’”  I cringe, thinking it might be the case. I want to say, ‘He had enough.’  But the meatloaf is still in my mouth.

     Ron, a preacher friend, once told me he preferred, ‘He was reassigned.’ I don’t want to copy Rodney Dangerfield’s tombstone, ‘There goes the neighborhood.’

     “You’re looking pale,” she says.  I feel my pulse, opt for the peach cobbler while there’s time. She says, “You deserve it. It’ll probably your last.” What a way to go.

**********

     Hard to say which hyperbole she might choose for her own announcement. If I have a say, hers will read, ‘She quit cooking.


Bud Hearn
February 28, 2014   




Please help Elena win the Frame My Future Scholarship Contest 2014

My daughter, Elena Pantelakis, is an artist and wonderful writer. She decided to be a teacher after the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting. She is attending college at the College of Coastal Georgia in Brunswick, Georgia. Please help her win the Frame My Future Scholarship Contest 2014 by selecting the link below, look for the “Like” icon above the picture on the left and click on it. The more “Likes” she gets, the better chance she has of winning. It only takes a few seconds.




On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that this is not a day for remembering violence, but for memorializing your decision to heal every wound that could cause it.

On this day of your life,  I believe God wants you to know that this is not a day for remembering violence, but for memorializing your decision to heal every wound that could cause it.

There is one question that no one will ask of those who use violence to make their point: What hurts you so bad thatyou feel you have to hurt me in order to heal it?

This does not condone violence, but it can help us to understand it -- and to understand how to stop it. Conversations with God says, "No one does anything inappropriate, given their model of the world." Embracing the wisdom in those eleven words could change the course of human history. 


Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Blog interviews by Kathleen Rodgers


I have three exciting guests making appearances on my blog over the next few weeks. If you have any interest in writing, reading or the publishing world, you’ll want to tune in: Here’s the lineup:

TH Feb. 27 – New Mexico author Lesley Poling-Kempes, Winner of the 2013 Tony Hillerman Award for Best Fiction, New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards.


TH March 6 – A Good Story, Joseph Durepos, Executive Editor/Trade Acquisitions at Loyola Press. 


TH March 13 – Day in the Life of a Literary Agent, An interview withJeanie Loiacono, President of Loiacono Literary Agency.

 

On this day of your life,I believe God wants you to know that the acknowledgment of your weakness is the first step in repairing your loss.

On this day of your life,I believe God wants you to know that the acknowledgment of your weakness is the first step in repairing your loss.

Thomas Kempis said that, and he was right. Sometimes
this is the hardest thing for people to do. Yet self-truth
and truth with others about where you have fallen short
almost ensures that you will go a long way. Everyone can
see you anyway, why not admit what everyone is seeing?

You cannot let go of anything if you cannot notice that you
are holding it. Admit your 'weaknesses' and watch them
morph into your greatest strengths. 

   
The Bible
Corinthians 8:2 Anyone who claims to know all the answers, doesn't really know very much. But the person who loves God is the one God knows and cares for.
Proverbs 3:5-6
New International Version (NIV)
Trust in the Lord with all your heart
    and lean not on your own understanding;
in all your ways submit to him,
    and he will make your paths straight.


Monday, February 24, 2014

BelleBooks acquires the sequel to Intimate Bondage by John Flynn…Intimate Disclosure!

BelleBooks acquires the sequel to Intimate Bondage by John Flynn…Intimate Disclosure!

With Intimate Bondage coming out very soon, the sequel, Intimate Disclosure will sure to be on your list for next year. He keeps you hypnotized with the unfolding of events, red herrings and, at times yelling, “No! Don’t.” This is a must buy, must keep, must share.

Intimate Disclosure
Inspector Kate Dawson is called to investigate a mass suicide; a call that will change her life, and possibly the whole world’s… forever.

Parents are killing their children and then themselves. They are the Chosen Ones, destined by God, to inherit the Earth. The First Pentecostal Church of God is planning on instigating the end of the world and has asked its parishioners to spare their children from the imminent holocaust. Not God’s will, but that of a mad man.

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com

Published by BelleBooks www.bellebooks.com  

www.john-flynn.com
Dr. John L. Flynn is an author, psychologist, and college dean. Born in Chicago, Illinois. He earned a Bachelor's and Master's Degree from the University of South Florida and a Ph.D. from Southern California University. He is a member of the Science Fiction Writers of America, and has been a regular contributor and columnist to dozens of science fiction magazines.
In 1977, he received the M. Carolyn Parker award for outstanding journalism for his freelance work on several Florida daily newspapers. He sold his first book, Future Threads, in 1985, and has subsequently had twelve other books published, including Cinematic Vampires: The Living Dead on Film, The Films of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Dissecting Aliens, Visions in Light and Shadow, War of the Worlds: From Wells to Spielberg, 75 Years of Universal Monsters, 50 Years of Hammer Horror, 101 Superheroes of the Silver Screen, 2001: Beyond the Infinite, The Jovian Dilemma, Phantoms of the Opera: Behind the Mask, and Future Prime (with Bob Blackwood). He has also written the Introduction to Signet’s new edition of Gaston Leroux’s Phantom of the Opera, and the Afterword to Signet’s new printing of The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells. From 2002 to 2004, Dr. Flynn was nominated for three Hugo Awards for his science fiction writing. John also received an honorable mention for his unproduced screenplay for The Jovian Dilemma in the 2003 Screenplay Festival writing competition.
In 1997, John switched gears from writing and literature to study psychology, and earned a degree as a clinical psychologist. His study, “The Etiology of Sexual Addiction: Childhood Trauma as a Primary Determinant,” has broken new ground in the diagnosis and treatment of sexual addiction.
He has also collaborated and written with Bob Blackwood’s two nonfiction/ pop cultures Future Prime: Top Ten Science Fiction Films and Everything I Know About Life I Learned From James Bond which are both represented by Loiacono Literary Agency and available for acquisition.



On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that everything is perfect Right Here, Right Now. And Right Here Right Now is all there is.

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that everything is perfect Right Here, Right Now. And Right Here Right Now is all there is.

Forget about the past. It does not exist, except in your
memory. Drop it. And stop worrying about how you're
going to get through tomorrow. Life is going on Right
Here, Right Now -- pay attention to that and
all will be well.

Embrace the present moment with gratefulness and
wonder, and you will turn it into whatever you have
been waiting for. 


Saturday, February 22, 2014

Prodigious Savant and Deviant Acts by JJ White have been acquired by Black Opal Books!

Prodigious Savant and Deviant Acts by JJ White have been acquired by Black Opal Books!

Prodigious Savant (Estimated release date Fall 2014)

There are fewer than one hundred reported cases of prodigious savants in the world. Those few who possess the savant syndrome all have an island of brilliance that allows them to excel in some remarkable talent. Unfortunately, they all share various developmental disabilities; some bizarre, others violent. 
In 1962 Vermont, seventeen-year-old Gavin Weaver survives a horrendous explosion, six hours of brain surgery, and thirty days in a coma, to awaken possessing not just one savant talent, but several: art, music, mathematics, and memory, and all without suffering any of the usual mental disabilities associated with head trauma…except one issue he keeps hidden from all.
His newly acquired abilities thrust him into the public eye as the amazing ‘Whiz Kid’ from Burlington; a moniker he detests. His genius, paranoia, and increased hallucinations result in some strange and extraordinary encounters with the icons of the ‘60s, including Bobby Fischer, Nikita Khrushchev, Edward R. Murrow, John Chancellor and even a tragic meeting with John Fitzgerald Kennedy. He also catches the eye of a neurologist who is unique in his own right, and is most interested in the young man’s brain -- for many reasons.
Gavin’s odds are slim that he will survive not only his external trials but also his inner conflicts; keeping him from the one thing he desires most, the girl he’s loved since childhood.

Deviant Acts (Estimated release date 2015)

Jackson is living his nightmares even when his eyes are open. Addicted to heroin since Vietnam, it is the only thing that tends to keep the horror at bay. Besides killing him slowly, it has cost him his job. Living with his mother, in the same home he grew up in, he is now stealing from her and his neighbors for a fix, his girlfriend since grade school has dumped him and the only means of transportation is a beat-up bike. Is there a word for lower than low?      
            Then his rich aunt from Vermont calls requiring his “services”. Cheryl, his so-called cousin, has been kidnapped and is being held for ransom. Auntie wants her back no matter what it costs, and she wants them all dead. Can Jackson kill again? Can he stay straight long enough to get her back? Nothing is what it seems.





White has written over two hundred short stories, had articles and stories published in several anthologies and magazines including, WordsmithThe Homestead ReviewThe Seven Hills Review and The Grey Sparrow Journal. “The Nine Hole League” is scheduled to be published in the Sherlock Holmes Mystery MagazineVolume 14. He has won awards and honors from the Alabama Writers Conclave, Writers-Editors International, Maryland Writers Association, The Royal Palm Literary Awards, Professional Writers of Prescott, and Writer’s Digest. He was recently nominated for the Pushcart Prize for his short piece in The Grey Sparrow Journal.
Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com

Published by Black Opal Books www.blackopalbooks.com

Buzz Bernard’s Tornado Almanac

Buzz Bernard’s Tornado Almanac



The Inspiration for Chasing Horizons-The Great Air Race that Changed the World

The Inspiration for Chasing Horizons-The Great Air Race that Changed the World





Now available on ebook and soon in print…Chasing Horizons-The Great Air Race that Changed the World
By Jim Bolander
Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency
Published by Ecanus Publishing
Amazon

This impossible feat set precedence for Lindberg, Earhart, Redfern and Yeagar.  This story touches on every element of emotion: a grand love story with beautiful poetry written on cigarette wrappers, to flying over open-ocean in horrific, frigid temperatures and one of the most patriotic and death-defying feats accomplished until space flight.
This "Indiana Jones" action starts out with Bolander and his daughter touring The Smithsonian’s Air and Space Museum where he is showing her Chicago, Great-Uncle Lowell’s plane, which inspires her to write about him for a school assignment. Then Bolander takes us to that very time and around the world in an open-air cockpit to win the race. It is an incredible read and a true story.
Chasing Horizons-The Great Air Race that Changed the World is a historical fiction depicting the aeronautical challenge of 1924 in which four Douglas World Cruisers and eight American crewmen set out from Seattle, Washington, to attempt the first around-the-world airplane flight. One hundred seventy-five days later two of the aircraft and crews became the first to circumnavigate earth.
Bolander has taken 90% fact and added the background story to bring it to life. His research and historical details will chill you to the bone when they are in the tundra of Alaska, make you want to swat the mosquitoes in the Orient, feel the sting of the sandstorms as they fly across the deserts of the Middle East, and stand in ovation as they make each extraordinary landing. Imagine a single engine, open cockpit, and wooden airplane held together with wires and bands; no GPS, no radios, no heater or a/c or toilet or any type of refreshments and you are to pilot this “just invented” flying machine around the world – and before any of the other 5 countries who joined the race. To these men, there was no turning back.
Britain, Italy, Argentina, Portugal, and France were all vying with the United States in 1924 to win the race to be first to fly around the world. The story of what transpired in the six months it took to accomplish this virgin task is the stuff legends and heroes are made of.  Lowell Smith, the first to complete the mission, is not only a humble and patriotic aviation icon, but also the great uncle to Jim Bolander, which makes this world and family history as well.  The desire for Bolander to honor his family by putting into words what everyone has forgotten was ignited by the curiosity of his daughter who chose Lowell Smith as the subject of a fifth grade report and oral presentation concerning a famous American.

From: 04/06/24 To: 09/28/24 (Seattle to Seattle, WA)
Miles Flown: 26,350 miles
Flying Time: 371H 11M
Plane Type: Douglas World Cruisers - Amphibians
Plane Names: Chicago, New Orleans, Seattle and Boston
Pilot Names: Lowell H. Smith, Erik Nelson, Frederick L. Martin & Leigh Wade
Comments: 1st Flight Round-the-World, 4 Planes started, 2 finished.
Bolander has written Beating Kings and Burning Angels published by Digital Pulp Publishing He has written several other novels and a book of poetry as well.

Jeanie Loiacono
President
Loiacono Literary Agency
448 Lacebark Dr.
Irving, Texas 75063
912-230-2207
jeanie.loiacono@loiaconoliteraryagency.com
www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com



Words from Pep A Walk Toward Awakening

Words from Pep
A Walk Toward Awakening


A dream had awakened me. Losing the battle to return to sleep I put on my clothes and stepped outside. Now, in another surreal dreamscape, before the moon surrendered the night to the sun, I ventured alone in a monochromatic world where my vision was opened to the unity before me. My state of reality altered and I saw harmony in all things. . . . . In the surf’s roar and silent movement of mists, in every act of love and kindness, in the heart of Sequoia and every creeping thing is His habitation. He floats through grass and rides the whirlwind. He fashions ocean wave and chisels mountain crags. In the breath of Vesuvius and collapse of St. Helen, in the whispering grace of the lily, the Answer to All Mysteries is revealed. In you, in me, in friend and enemy, within sentient and inanimate dwells One Designer. . . . . . I looked into the sky and asked myself, “How is it that this Truth is so unmistakable, yet so often hidden? How is it that I should walk in blindness before the Artist, deafness in the company of the Conductor, as zombie in the presence of Life?” . . . . . This knowledge of the heart is heaven itself. This knowing, that we are immersed in the Great Caring, lifts us to wonder and holy carelessness, frees us to live. . . . . Here in the divinity of this night I had fallen into this One Who Is Always There, my Beginning and My End, my Comfort, Peace and Lover. He is the fire in the forest and its rebirth from dark ash. He is in the beauty of tender compassion, in hunting wolf and broken bones of caribou, in Solomon’s temple and the Pyramids of Giza. . . . . . Though we are often distracted, deceived; though, in fear we needlessly struggle for survival and approval, around us at every moment is our All Parent - Father/Mother, the Loving Anchor of Reality and I, we, all things are safely, forever embraced. . . . . . In this night, now standing near a solitary elm whose umbrella like canopy sealed off the sky, it occurred to me – beyond what obscures my vision is that which is actual, that which transcends what I think so real. . . . . My stroll in the night was not a dream, but a walk toward awakening.

ONE WORLD  -  ONE FAMILY OF MAN  -  ONE CREATOR OF ALL

The best review ever on The Man Called Brown Condor!

The best review ever on The Man Called Brown Condor!


The Man Called Brown Condor. 293p by Thomas E. Simmons. Skyhorse Publishing Inc. 2013.
Being an Air force brat who grew up in Debrezeit on fumes of aviation fuel, I am embarrassed to say that I never heard of this man they called the ‘Brown Condor”. It was during one of my aimless wanderings in the aisles of the local library that I came across this book. Titled The Man Called the Brown Condor, the book is a result of three decades of research and details the “forgotten history of an African American fighter pilot” in whose debt Ethiopians will always remain.
This thrilling biography traces the life of a seven year old black child from segregated Mississippi in 1910, afflicted with the love of flying. It chronicles his incredible journey against impossible odds in white America, the tortuous path he took to make his dreams of flying come true for himself and for many others and excel in it in more ways than one… his own plane, his own airfield, his own flying school!!. His story is not just about flying; it is about tenacity, perseverance and creating doors where there were none. For the motivated it is inspirational. Every few pages the gripping account left me exclaiming… No way! Really? Ere Betesekelw!!!. The story should particularly resonate with those of us of Ethiopian extraction who straddle two continents and have the misfortune of being called by the now unflattering term “Diaspora”. Us and ours who have chosen to make home outside home are faced daily with challenges that are not much different.
A third of the way in the book, the life of John Charles Robinson would intersect that of “Ras Taferi” the twenty-six-year old “regent to Empress Zauditu ruler of an ancient, unconquered Christian nation….the first to serve the second, the second to place his life in the hands of the first.” It goes on to a fascination exposition the life and times of this man who is the un-lauded father of the Tuskegee air men, who became a commander of the Ethiopian Air corps and served during the Italian occupation, wounded three times who later became the personal pilot of Emperor Hailesilassie, rebuilt the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force, set up a school and trained the very first crop of pilots and technicians and helped to found the Ethiopian Airlines. The book provides priceless nuggets of information on some of the heroes of a forgotten era. Memorable personalities like Mulu Asah the Ethiopian pilot, Ras Mebratu, “the weizero,” Julian the opportunist, Corriger the reckless French man, the adventurer von Rosen whose aunt was married to Hermann Goring (Goring of the Luftwaffe !!!) are resurrected. Robinson’s relation with the King and his court, the geopolitical forces that were at play as well as life in Ethiopia in the 1930s are vividly described.
I hope it would not be presumptuous of me if I am appreciative of the fact the author took the trouble to avoid anglicization of Ethiopian names of people and places. In addition to the wonderful photo inserts, I found the placement of the two full color roundels of the old Imperial Air force on the back cover particularly touching. I extend my sincerest gratitude to Mr. Simmons for bringing to light the story of this remarkable man though now he has added one more item to my bucket list… to visit the final resting place of Colonel John C. Robinson at ……
Compatriots! Let’s give tribute to the ‘Brown Condor” by getting to know about his life and his service to Ethiopia.
By Daniel Assefa 
July 30, 2013


Friday, February 21, 2014

Bouncing with Style: After A Year Of Loss and Rejection, I Find Success by Kathleen M. Rodgers

Bouncing with Style
Real People with Real Solutions to Real Problems
Bouncing with Style: After A Year Of Loss and Rejection, I Find Success by Kathleen M. Rodgers



Murder at Caney Fork by Wally Avett – release date March 15, 2014

Murder at Caney Fork by Wally Avett – release date March 15, 2014



It’s the trial of the century in a 1940’s North Carolina town.
Rape. Murder. Vigilante justice.
War hero and law student Wes Ross has to save his uncle—but hide the truth.


            Taught to shoot in the rough logging camps of the North Carolina swamps, Wes Ross remembers his lessons well. Dodging hostile gunfire with dozens of other young Marines, he storms a remote Pacific island as one of Carlson's Raiders. It was the first commando-style attack of World War II.  He blasts several Japanese snipers from their palm-tree hideouts with buckshot before an enemy bullet sends him home.
            The Carolina home front includes a new girlfriend and a new occupation, learning to be a rural lawyer in his uncle's law office, including courtroom intrigue and what goes on behind the scenes. Wes, like his uncles, is a good man, the kind who takes up for the poor and downtrodden, looking out for the black farmers and others who are easy prey for bullies.           
            Frog Cutshaw is the storekeeper in the Caney Fork backwoods, a swaggering ex-moonshiner who is deadly with his ever-present .45 auto pistol.  Frog's daylight rape of a married woman and the brutal killing of her husband bring on Bible Belt vigilante justice, an eye for an eye, life for a life.
            Wes is caught in the middle as a participant in the killing of Frog Cutshaw. Soon one uncle is being tried for a murder he planned but did not commit and another uncle defends him, circumstances and witnesses threatening to convict the wrong man.
Wes knows all too well who pulled the trigger of the 12-gauge pumpgun, and knows that the shooter could end up on Death Row.

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com
Published by BelleBooks
To order books please contact: Danielle Childers,,Marketing Director,,BelleBooks, Inc.
901.344.9024 DanielleChilders@bellebooks.com



Project Keepsake by Amber Lanier Nagel is now available in paperback and ebook!

Project Keepsake by Amber Lanier Nagel is now available in paperback and ebook!

                                                    













Amber Lanier Nagle’s anthology, Project Keepsake, is a collection of short stories told in first-person by both writers and aspiring writers about their treasured keepsakes and mementos.  From buckeyes to pocket knives to pound cake pans to rings to fishing lures, each keepsake—and each story—is unique, yet each reveals common attributes that bind us together and celebrate the glorious human experience. 
Amber Lanier Nagle is a Georgia girl through and through.  In 2006 after working for eighteen years as an engineer, she reinvented herself as a freelance writer specializing in nonfiction articles. Her work has appeared in GRIT, Mother Earth News, GEORGIA Magazine, Atlanta Life, Points North, Chatter, Get Out Chattanooga and many other magazines and newspapers. 
For eleven years, she penned a monthly newspaper column focusing on memories, relationships, and unique observations from her lifetime in Georgia.  In 2012, she published a selection of these articles in an ebook titled Southern Exposure:  A Few Random, Rambling, Retrospective Pieces of My Life. She is a graduate of both Georgia Institute of Technology and Mercer University and is an active member of the Georgia Writers Association and the Chattanooga Writers Guild. www.ambernagle.com
Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com
Published by Native Ink Press www.nativeinkpress.com



On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know... ...that the next step is the most important step. Take it now. Do not wait.

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know...    

...that the next step is the most important step.
Take it now. Do not wait.


Life is not going to come down there and sprinkle
glitter dust on your shoulders to let you know that you
are Good...or that you are walking the Right Path...or
that you are making the Best Decision.

Take the next step. Right now. Stop waiting for a "sign"
from the "gods." Your sign is your intuition, wrapped
in your desire.

Hesitation is not a stopping place on the road to heaven.   


Wednesday, February 19, 2014

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that desire is a powerful force that can be used to make things happen.

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that desire is a powerful force that can be used to make things happen.

Marcia Weider said that, and she was right. Yet do
not confuse desire with expectation, or with need.
Desire has an entirely different quality to it. You can
desire something without needing or requiring it.

That little difference makes everything work. That
little difference is the whole trick. Desire, do not
Require. To desire propels. To require compels. Life
will not be compelled, but it can be coaxed...

Whoever or whatever you are trying to compel today,
stop it. Just...fall back into the soft cotton of desire. 


Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Buzz Bernard's Tornado Almanac!

Buzz Bernard's Tornado Almanac!
http://www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com/buzz-bernards-tornado-almanac/

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know that life has nothing to do with what you are doing, and everything to do with what you are being.

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know
that life has nothing to do with what you are doing,
and everything to do with what you are being.
Be careful not to get caught in the "doingness" of your
life. That is not what you are here for. You are a sacred
soul, and you came here to the earth to Be something.
And not just one thing, but many things.
The wonderful thing is, you get to choose what that is.
And you get to do that right now. Always Right Now.
So what do you choose to Be right now? Happy?
Content? Safe? Peace? Forgiving? Compassionate?
Love? Go ahead, choose. As many as you wish!



Monday, February 17, 2014

On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know...



On this day of your life, I believe God wants you to know...    

...that if you're doing something for someone else's
approval, you may as well not do it at all.

There is only one reason to do anything: to announce
and declare, express and fulfill, become and
experience Who You Really Are.

Do what you do, therefore, for the sheer joy of it,
for sheer joy is who you are. Do what you choose,
not what someone else chooses for you.  

Neal Donald Walsch