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Babies

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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Mike and his pregnant wife live on a farm in the distant rural regions of Ireland with no running water, no electricity, none of the creature comforts. One night, Mikes’ wife goes into labor. The local doctor is there in attendance.

"What d’ya want me to do, Doctor?"

"Hold the lantern, Mikey. Here it comes!" The doctor delivers the child and holds it up for the proud father to see. "Mike, you’re the proud father of a fine strapping boy."

"Saints be praised, I…"

Before Mike can finish the doctor interrupts, "Wait a minute. Hold the lantern, Mikey." Soon the doctor delivers the next child. "You’ve a full set now, Mikey. A beautiful baby daughter."

"Thanks be to…"

Again the doctor cuts in. "Hold the lantern, Mikey! Hold the lantern!" Soon the doctor delivers a third child. The doctor holds up the third baby for Mike’s inspection.

"Doctor," asks Mike, "do you think it’s the light that’s attracting ‘em?"

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Latest Family Auctions

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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Hey, check out these auctions:

Original Photo Col. Frank Bormand & Family, Gary, IN
US $9.00 (2 Bids)
End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 11:22:27 PST
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Lanark IL Family Group w Three Children Cabinet Photo
US $9.99
End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 11:22:36 PST
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Buy it now | Add to watch list

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Rich man vs the poor man

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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“A poor man can see forward. A rich man becomes blind until he cannot see good and wrong.”

A group of Compassion bloggers are wrapping up their travels through Kenya right now, journaling the great work Compassion International does with each sponsorship they receive for a child.

Just $38 a month sponsors a child.

What could you forgo each month to sponsor a child?

Shaun Groves shares some insight he’s learned from Eluid, an 18 year-old Kenyan man.

An orphan for ten years, he lives alone in a home made of cardboard, wood and corrugated metal. It’s eight feet long, five and a half feet high and five feet deep.

Because of a sponsor named Nick in Northern California, Eliud has enough – but you and I would call him poor.

Eliud prefers it that way.

After an intensely intimate conversation in Eliud’s home

We walked together through the second largest slum in Kenya. Past the homes of it’s 800,000 residents.

We sloshed through a mixture of mud and garbage. Two new friends talking in the rain about wealth and poverty.

“I’d like to ask you a difficult question,” I warned. “I’ve been waiting a long time to ask someone this and I’ve finally found someone wise enough to answer it. Are you ready?”

He smiled slightly back at me.

“What does it mean to be ‘rich’ or ‘poor’? How much must a man have to be called rich?”

“Well,” he said, “I think it is true that a rich man has great wealth and a poor man does not have his basic needs. A rich man has new cars and a big house. The poor do not have basic needs.”

We passed a small opening in the sea of rusted metal. Inside, pornography played on a television for men with a few shillings. “Cinema” the sign read.

“In my country,” Eliud said, “to be rich requires corruption. I would rather be poor with God than rich with a corrupted life.”

We turned a corner and walked down a driveway onto church property where lunch was being prepared. Brad and I stopped under an awning and drank in Eliud’s last words of wisdom.

“A poor man can see forward. A rich man becomes blind until he cannot see good and wrong.”

There was a long pause.

“You’re right,” I finally confessed. “I am rich. And it makes me blind sometimes. I once thought I was too poor to share more but then I met my first sponsored child. She showed me how much good $38 can do. You are an amazing young man. Nick is helping you by being your sponsor but you are helping him by being his sponsored child. You are helping him see the good God can do when we share.”

His eyes watered just a little. Payback for all the tears these kids in Kenya have wrung out of me this week.

(Read the full post with photos)

Because his family chose to simplify, the Groves family is able to sponsor three children through Compassion International.

It goes back to the root idea behind our site:

Live simply so that others may simply live.

I have to wonder — where else can I simplify to care more for those around me?

Read what the other bloggers have to say:

Brad Ruggles
Kristen Welch
MckMama
Kent Shaffer
LV Hanson
Ryan Detzel

Rich man vs the poor man


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Faith The Dog

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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An amazing story of a two legged dog.

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Unbelievable Attitude

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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Yesterday, I posted Unbelievable Story: Holy Artifact. It is a true story. I never said that I could prove it true, but let me further tell you what I can prove. 1. I am 65 years old. I don’t look like the "normal" 65 year old person. 2. I have been very lucky in life. At age 27, I was able to build my "dream" house, at a cost of around a million dollars (1972) all cash. 3. I retired and traveled the world for 20 years. 4. I have not been to a doctor since about 1970, and I feel great. 5. I don’t ask for money and I don’t need money. I have 2 homes in Florida that I and my wife and our 5 dogs travel every week ( we live 2 days in Sarasota and 5 days in Citrus Springs. We like the cooler weather and hills and nature of north Florida.) If anyone wants to "test" this artifact, so be it. It cost you zero. It is a gift from the Creator. I resent being called a "scammer" when the person who is doing it has never actually talked with me to asertain if I am a crazy person or just a "messenger" of the Creator. Please read all my postings at: noham33621’s Documents | Scribd and especially, The Rest of the Story and get a better idea of who I am before you start "throwing rocks". Robert Mahon

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Love Liberty Disco

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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Amazon.com
Those in the pursuit of happiness may well find it in Love Liberty Disco. Following the success of Step Up to the Microphone, Newsboys are spinning out pure pop gold, glamming up their rock with a delicious party vibe. Britpop flavor melds seamlessly with crunchy guitar, soaring string arrangements, and falsetto vocals on “Break” and the roots-pop of “Everyone’s Someone.” The title track, punctuated by elastic bass, hand claps, and feel-good lyrics, is about the most fun thi… More >>

Love Liberty Disco

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Outfitting your kitchen for less

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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By Russell Ramirez
Originally posted at therockinchef.wordpress.com

Every time I go to my parents house, my mother wants me to cook — or rather, show her how to make a new dish, a new technique — which I am in favor of and don’t mind one bit.

The problem is that as growing up and now, the kitchen equipment was always lacking, or excessive in the wrong ways. For instance, my mother likes to use Farberwear pans, which are aluminum but far to thin to have real control of heat.

I recently read an old article written by Mark Bitmann discussing the essentials of a kitchen. I like most of what he had to say and I do like the guy. He knows his stuff (check out his books if you get a chance). But I thought I’d offer my own list of basic kitchen tools — the tools I’ve found to be most beneficial in my kitchen.

I know that the big question is always on knives, they are meant to be functional, they can be works of art though. I don’t think you have to go out and spend $$$ on a Shun or Korin right of the bat. Just find one that fits in your hand. The blade should be stiff and it should be full tang, a single pice of metal that runs the length of the blade and handle. This helps with durability and balance. If it is going to be your chef’s knife, 8″ to 10″ is good, I use an 8″ Caphalon Katana, because it was given to me and I like the way it fits in my hand. You don’t have to spend a lot of cash on a knife (like some that I want in to the $800 range), just find one you like.

Now on to the rest — all the hardware you need without spending a lot of cash.

$40 – 16 qt. stock pot for stocks, soups, pastas.

$23 – 4 1/2 qt cast aluminum sauce pot, my go to all-purpose pot. Just refrain from highly acidic foods. This is the way to go.

$17 – 1 1/2 cast aluminum pot just because sometimes you need a smaller pot, works great for clarifying butter, and boiling/poaching eggs.

$30 – Best for Omelets and egg cookery

$35 – This is prefect for all of your saute and braising needs for most things. You can pay a little more for an Aluminum cast stainless lined. Great heating and non reactive. You might want one in 10″ and 14″ for larger chores.

These to are a pair to have, 1/2 sheet pans runs $7 used it for everything from cookie sheet, overflow tray for pies/tarts, a trusty pot over. Use it with the cooling rack ($5) for a roasting pan. It’s nice to have a pair of these around.

$30 – This is a Silpat, made of high heat-resistant silicon use it for all your baking and candy needs, nothing will stick to this, we have used if for fruit jellies to caramel. I have even used it to roll sushi, so the rice doesn’t stick. Just remember to hand wash, air dry, never use a knife on it, and always roll it back up when it is dry.

$12 – High heat spat gets used for any stirring job in my kitchen. I use it in my non stick pans so i don’t ruin it. Try it with your scrambled eggs/omelets/frittatas, I keep a few around because it is just what I reach for.

$3 – Tongs are indispensable for grabbing your hot items. My hands can handle heat up to 160F (for short periods of time) but sometimes you need something else, like turning steaks, frying items, and pulling pasta out of boiling water.

$3 – A strainer a great help for removing what you don’t want out of liquids.

$5 – A thermometer one of the best tools to have when you know how to use it. I have used it in roasting, bread baking to get the artisan bread just right, chocolate tempering. It’s main goal is to keep us safe from the invisible bugs.

So there you have it, all your kitchen necessities for under $300 (unless you go gung-ho with your knife purchase).

Did we leave anything out? Is there an essential kitchen tool you use every day?

Russel Ramirez recently completed culinary school at Le Cordon Bleu in Austin. He hopes to own his own restaurant in the near future that offers training and internships to at risk kids in the Austin area. He blogs at therockinchef.wordpress.com or you can follow him on Twitter: @therockingchef

Outfitting your kitchen for less


st peter's brewery minimalist guide something beautiful podcast

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and there was a peace across this land…

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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As I end the day I wanted to reflect on an opportunity I had to cross paths with an old friend, or maybe a foe. It all depends on what side you were on in the situation way back when. It was my youth pastor when I was in high school. The long and short of it was a situation arose where I left the church home that I had grown up in and moved on. I then moved on, literally. This was my kick to the curb, my moment of emptiness, my moment of desertion. As I moved on and moved to another state I held a great deal of resentment and anger toward this individual. Some deserved, mostly not. It has taken a chance encounter and a tremendous amount of prayer to begin the healing process in my own life. As I grew older and away from the situation my heart began to heal and the door to the memory’s had begun to seal shut. Finally I forgave my youth pastor and chalked the situation up to youthful ignorance on his part not mine.

Tonight at dinner I had the Mushu Pork, it was quite a show to watch Dennis our waiter give it his all. He is and blessed man, and I prayed for him tonight at and during dinner. I hoped that he see the forgiveness in our tones and would gleam a bit of peace when he was overhearing our conversation. It was 16 years since I had seen my Youth Pastor. He hasn’t changed. A bit older, alot wiser but still the same youthful spirit. While talking about old times, he mentioned that he was reflecting and recalling his time as my youth pastor, he didn’t remember the specifics, but he did remember that there was an issue and then I just disappeared. He didn’t remember the reason or even understand them, but he said God had placed a burden on his heart that he needed to apologize for anything he might have done. Not quite what I was expecting, but something I will take and run with. My youth pastor might not realize or understand the impact that he had made in my life both in a positive and negative way, but one thing I have come to understand is that God provide peace and comfort, but only in his time. I forgive  my youth pastor and I asked for his forgiveness as well for projecting some of my situational anger toward him and others.

As you grow in life, perspective is key. Once you begin to move away from the situation you gain wisdom and depth. As I was leaving the dinner, I was thanking God for the opportunity to allow our paths to cross. My youth pastor is a good man of God. I see that now. I am now able to example multi-dimensional relationships and investigate them with conviction. I am happy and content with how things have turned out.

I look forward to a future meeting and an opportunity to once again fellowship with my youth pastor. When you reach this, thank you for once again touching my heart. Thank you for brining emotions to the surface that I am finally able to address. Thank you for being available and willing to examine what you might have done to cause the situation to happen, and most of all, thank you for saying you are sorry. You have truly touched my heart.

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Latest Faith Auctions

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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Hey, check out these auctions:

Articles of Faith: A Frontline History of the Abortion
US $8.95
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Dynamics of Faith by Paul Tillich
US $5.95
End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 11:21:04 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $5.95
Buy it now | Add to watch list

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Christian Flag 3ft x 5ft with Indoor Pole Hem and Fringe – Cotton

March 10th, 2010 by admin
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  • 3×5ft Flag with Gold Fringe
  • Made From Traditional Densely Woven Heavy Cotton Material
  • Constructed with Pole Hem instead of Grommets
  • For Indoor Use Only
  • Low Cost Shipping Available!

Product Description
Very attractive 3′x 5′ Christian flag made from traditional densely woven heavy cotton material with a lined pole hem and golden fringe. These impressive indoor flags look great in your church or home. These flags look great indoor and are designed for use with indoor flagpoles. They are not suitable for outdoor use…. More >>

Christian Flag 3ft x 5ft with Indoor Pole Hem and Fringe – Cotton

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