latest
I think at one time or another, most everyone has wished they could change something about themselves. Over the years I’ve created an EXTENSIVE wish list of things I’d like to change, but it got narrowed down this week, thanks to a home improvement project. In short, pardon the pun, I want to be taller!
Read moreOn a recent walk, I was deep in thought about a note I wrote to my granddaughter graduating from college. My advice was pretty straightforward – do the right thing, even when no one is looking.
Read moreYou know you’ve reached the country when oncoming vehicles go by and a complete stranger behind the wheel greets you with a wave as the two windshields pass. The wave, of course, is the simple hand gesture usually meant to convey “Hey buddy,” “How ya doing?” or “Howdy.”
Read moreWhen Jack met Carol, he was 10 years old and she was 13. That’s when the “crush” began. In the 1950s Jack and Carol grew up together in a small northeast Louisiana town. It was a small working-class neighborhood where everyone knew everyone and no one locked their doors at night; an idyllic time to be a kid.
Read moreAs more businesses and churches reopen and we’re able to resume most leisure activities, are we finally looking at the light at the end of the COVID tunnel? I do hope so, but the question is, how do we know it’s really the end? As a news reporter who fell in love with journalism in the 10th grade, I regret to say you won’t find the truth about COVID’s end in the mainstream media.
Read moreIt takes a significant amount of hubris to claim that you are “The Greatest” at anything in this world. Muhammad Ali was one who carried that moniker for most of his professional life. Today marks the anniversary of his death in 2016 and I had a brief encounter with Mr. Ali back in 1977.
Read moreRecently my gentleman friend and I engaged in some of that late night telephone bantering that we often do. After being gone all day, he got home late and we talked while he unloaded his car. His late arrival had interrupted the schedule of his little dog Jellybean, who is accustomed to an evening dog biscuit, or as he calls it, “a cookie.” Just like everyone else who likes to give a dog a treat, he makes her “perform.”
Read moreTo lay a fellow service member to rest is the most solemn duty that a veteran or active duty member can experience. Members of the United States military act with selfless service, pride, and respect to the point that it is in our DNA. This is part of what makes a servicemember’s final sendoff so emotionally impactful. We are all in it together.
Read more