American Minute for December 21st

Cover of "John Newton (Men of Faith)"

“Amazing grace! How sweet the sound,

That saved a wretch like me!

I once was lost, but now am found,

Was blind, but now I see.”

These were the words of John Newton, a former slave ship captain, who died DECEMBER 21, 1807.

At age 11, his mother died and he went to sea with his father.

He fell in love with Mary Catlett while on shore leave, but overstaying his visit, he missed his ship’s departure and was pressed by a gang onto the HMS Harwich.

His reckless behavior caused him to be traded to a slave ship.

While on a West African plantation buying slaves, his employer enslaved him.

He was rescued, but continued his immoral life, deriding Christians with blasphemy that shocked even sailors.

During a storm that nearly sank them, he first prayed.

He read Thomas a Kempis’ ‘Imitation of Christ,’ left the slave-trade and became a minister, preaching the rest of his life against slavery.

Having encouraged William Wilberforce to end slavery in England, his tombstone read,

“John Newton, Clerk,

once an infidel and libertine,

a servant of slaves in Africa,

was, by the rich mercy

of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

preserved, restored, pardoned,

and appointed to preach the faith

he had long labored to destroy.”

via American Minute for December 21st.

 

Girl, you are on FIRE! Great post about one of the great truths of relationships; the most important one you have is with yourself — all else flows from that one truth and understanding the only things you can control are your perception or your procedures…

17 Sneaky Ways to Stay Energized During the Holidays

Greatist – Health and Fitness Articles, News, and Tips

Full story at:  17 Sneaky Ways to Stay Energized During the Holidays.

When the Student Is Ready, the Teacher Appears.

The Happiness Project. By the way,  I wonder if the opposite is true?

via Secret of Adulthood: When the Student Is Ready, the Teacher Appears..

Stylin’ Duck

Pops Digital

via Stylin Duck.

The 21 Most Beautiful Images of the Universe

mentalflossr:

The year’s most beautiful, stunning, breathtaking images of the universe.

via Tumblr

10 Times TIME’s Person of the Year Wasn’t Really a Person

mentalflossr:

Here are 10 winners who were generic people, groups of people, or things.

via Tumblr

Ultimate Hacks For The Best Christmas Ever

Stepcase Lifehack

Full story at:  Ultimate Hacks For The Best Christmas Ever.

Derelict log cabin

via Tumblr

This Is One Serving: Holiday Party Snacks

Greatist – Health and Fitness Articles, News, and Tips

Get more here: This Is One Serving: Holiday Party Snacks.

Temporary Happiness

Live Life Quotes, Love Life Quotes, Live Life Happy

via Temporary Happiness.

Good stuff…

Steven Male's avatarThe 365 Day Challenge

Day 23 – 23rd of January, 2011


“Simply by changing your habitual vocabulary – the words you consistently use to describe the emotions of your life – you can instantaneously change how you think, how you feel, and how you live.”
– Tony Robbins

 

Transformational vocabulary is based around the idea of the words you describe events with. For example if two people were watching a circus, one person could describe it as fantabulous and the other could describe it as good. Although the performance was the same in both pairs of eyes, the two people will feel a different way about the performance based on the word they used to label it. The person that said fantabulous will walk out feeling happier and more amazed compared to the person who said it was simply good.

 

The next level of this is about the habitual vocabulary we use…

View original post 423 more words

Love Yourself First!

The Daily Love

via Visual Inspiration: Love Yourself First!.

American Minute for December 19th

Valley-Forge

Driven into Pennsylvania by the British, the Continental Army set up camp at Valley Forge, DECEMBER 19, 1777, just 25 miles from British occupied Philadelphia.

Lacking food and supplies, soldiers died at the rate of twelve per day.

Of 11,000 soldiers, 2,500 died of cold, hunger and disease.

A Committee from Congress reported “feet and legs froze till they became black, and it was often necessary to amputate them.”

Soldiers were there from every State in the new union, some as young as 12, others as old as 60, and though most were white, some were African American and American Indians.

Quaker farmer Isaac Potts observed General Washington kneeling in prayer in the snow.

Hessian Major Carl Leopold Baurmeister noted the only thing that kept the American army from disintegrating was their “spirit of liberty.”

In a letter written to John Banister, Washington recorded:

“To see men without clothes to cover their nakedness, without blankets to lay on, without shoes, by which their marches might be traced by the blood from their feet…

and at Christmas taking up their…quarters within a day’s march of the enemy…is a mark of patience and obedience which in my opinion can scarce be paralleled.”

via American Minute for December 19th.

Set a Deadline For Task Completion

30sec Tip: Set a Deadline For Task Completion..

 

How to set goals that will actually make you happy

Me, Myself, and I

AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com

via Me, Myself, and I.

What Factory Farms Are Doing to Fish

You might think this is a departure from my normal fare, but it’s all related to quality of life — especially if you live in a rural area like I do:

What to do with animal poop? It’s a question that plagues organic and factory farmers alike, and in areas with lots of factory farms (also called concentrated animal-feeding operations, or CAFOs), animal manure is accused of adding high levels of nitrogen and phosphorous to nearby waterways, robbing them of oxygen and killing the fish that call them home.

Animal-farm owners have attempted to solve the problem by selling all that manure off to farmers, who can apply the nutrient-rich manure from CAFOs to their fields as fertilizer. But in doing so, the farmers introduce another problem to the beleaguered streams, according to a new study in Environmental Science & Technology—that of too many hormones.

Full story at:  What Factory Farms Are Doing to Fish | Rodale News.

Our county only has about 20,000 people but thanks to the factory farms in our area, the county has a ‘poop equvalent’ of a city of 1.3 million people as cattle alone produce the effluent of 43 humans. There’s a double whammy for us here in Kewaunee County as a large part of our economy depends on sport fishing during the summer [we are the salmon and trout capital of the Great Lakes here in Algoma]. Concerned citizens need to ask if factory farms or CAFOs are killing a huge segment of the local economy [in addition to all the other damage they are doing] while lining their own pockets. Unconcerned citizens need to wake up!

5 peeps 1 guitar [and other hot videos]

YouTube Rewind 2012

Happy anniversary to us…

24 years ago today my wife and son and I were married in Zephyr Cove, Nevada and that has made all the difference in my world. I ask you, how could I have resisted this package?

CJ and Keegan

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