Friday, August 31, 2007

The 2007 BYU Cougar Football Season is Finally Here!

Tradition
Spirit
Honor


I'm so excited I can hardly stand it. I love BYU football, which I guess is evident from my writing of the book 13-0: Reflections of Champions. But I have followed BYU football since I first became a student there in 1983. Okay, no comments about how old I am. But yes, Steve Young was the quarterback at the time.

It got into my blood with the '83 team that made it possible for the 1984 team to win the National Championship and it never left.

Every week there is a game, my husband and make careful plans to be parked in front of our television set, football food in place, drinks in place and our attention glued to the television screen. It is something we really enjoy doing together. (Alvin hates pregame and postgame traffic, so we watch the games from home.)

See my handsome nephew up above? Sete Aulai is the center and the team captain. I didn't know about the team captain thing until we had dinner the other night with him. This fantastic football player is graduating in April with a degree in Sociology. So not only is he good . . . he's smart. Could I be prouder, no, not really. We had so much fun visiting with him. He and my husband grew up in the same town, went to the same high school (albeit a couple of decades apart) and remembered all the same places. We ate good food, listened to music for hours and generally enjoyed the quiet time we had with him before football season starts --- in less than 36 HOURS!

I've cruised all over the internet and blogworld looking at the fan sites, sports sites, etc. looking to see what the general consensus about the BYU football team is. Some see it the way I do, others don't.

That's our other nephew, Harvey Unga, provin' his stuff in Spring practice. Now he is the starting running back. Also a very amazing young man dedicated to his studies and football.

Here's the way I see it. Here's my prediction: The BYU Cougars will go undefeated and will show the world the magnitude of the team they have become under the careful tutelage of Bronco Mendenhall, Robert Anae and the other coaches. They are Bronco's "Sons of Helaman" and he is not ashamed to call them such. The night before every game the players speak at a fireside in whatever city they are in. Tonight they'll be in Pleasant Grove. Is that amazing or what? I love hearing about the spiritual side of this football team. They truly have become that Band of Brothers Bronco wanted them to become.

Sete mentioned that Bronco is a strict disciplinarian. He wasn't complaining, in fact he seemed to appreciate it. But Bronco's strict sense of what is right or wrong, his insistence on physical, emotional and spiritual strength is amazing. I'm so pleased with the direction this team has taken and the young men that comprise the team.

Tonight Alvin and I will be at the Legends Grill on BYU's campus speaking to members of CougarNet and the Athletic Hosts along with Dick Harmon.

Dick Harmon's take on the upcoming game was in his column today:
PROVO — Time is closing in on BYU's season opener against Arizona on Saturday and coach Bronco Mendenhall said he still has several aspects of the game to work on today as his team finalizes a game plan for the Wildcats.

"We have a couple of situations to clean up, things that, if they happen in a game you'd feel bad if you hadn't worked on them," said Mendenhall. "After (Thursday), they'll all be done."

The Cougars and Wildcats kick off their seasons Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The game will be televised live nationally on Versus and regionally on The mtn. network.

Players went through a spirited practice Wednesday, working against Arizona scout teams both offensively and defensively. It is no secret Arizona has thrown out its offense deployed a year ago, one that averaged just over 16 points a game. The new look is from Texas Tech with the hire of former Red Raider offensive coordinator Sonny Dykes.

Fans in Tucson expect Arizona to hurl the football 50 to 60 times a game and bank that points will follow as the Wildcats eye a challenge to conference champion and national favorite USC.

That change is both a mystery and a familiarity to BYU. The Cougars are used to chasing receivers in practice, but how Arizona fine-tunes its Texas Tech offense to its talent and what emphasis is made is something only the game will illustrate.

Have the Cougar defensive staff left anything undone heading into the weekend after three weeks of camp?

"No, we feel pretty good over what we've got done," said secondary coach Jaime Hill. "Whatever happens will happen. We're not scared. We're not worried. Whatever happens, happens."

Senior corner Ben Criddle is still a little beat up, said Hill, but he'll be leading the way with senior Quinn Gooch Saturday as the Cougars play a little mirror image of their own offense, said Hill.

"Ben is ready to go. He's not a hundred percent, but he's gotta be ready to go and he can't worry about his situation (foot surgery). "

Hill does not have any plan for the number of reps Criddle will handle come Saturday, and he does not know if he will spell him with backup Andre Saulsberry at the boundary corner position.

"You just have to go out and play; play the game, play to play and don't worry about being taken out, just play," said the coach. -->

The Wildcats will likely throw more deep passes than the Cougars, utilizing the speed on the team, according to Hill. "We'll see what happens. We feel good about our preparation."

COUGAR NOTES: The Maori war dance, the Haka, is back. Players rehearsed their chants and moves after Wednesday's practice, led by junior H-back Bryce Mahuika. Both home and away, the Cougars have made it a tradition the past two seasons ... Mendenhall announced freshmen defensive backs Jordan Pendleton and Steven Thomas will redshirt and a third newcomer, receiver Jordan Smith, could be redshirted depending on health of receivers in the next few weeks ... Senior Matt Allen (broken finger) did catch passes with a cast on his hand on Wednesday. His status for the game will be made at game time.

SELLOUT RESONATES: LaVell Edwards Stadium is sold out, and that rings a cord with players. "I'm excited about that," said linebacker Bryan Kehl. "It means a lot to me. It means the fans are supporting us, and we're doing well and we're having success."

"Obviously, the attendance rises and falls with success and with wins and losses. I'm excited to see the stadium full. I think they can expect to see a great football contest. It might not be a high-scoring charade, but being a defensive player, I don't like that anyway. I expect it to be a defensive battle, much like it was last year down in the desert in Tucson. I would say to the fans to wear blue and come expecting victory."

O-LINE HEALTH: Tackle Dallas Reynolds, who was nursing a shoulder last year, said he's ready to go and the rest of the blockers are as healthy as can be expected. Led by senior center Sete Aulai, the front line will get all it wants out of Arizona, a team with 10 returning starters. "I think our offensive line is the best it gets in college football. Knowing that those guys are up there protecting me, it really gives the offense more confidence."

And so we will see. Will Sete, Harvey, Eathan and the gang be able to take Arizona? Oh yeah, without even breaking a sweat. Okay, maybe they'll sweat, but they'll look good doin' it. We have another team building up to a National Championship because the BCS will be broken one way or the other. Someone is going to get guts and money enough to go after them and break that petty monopoly formed to keep a team like the Cougars from ever taking a championship again. Nice try . . . ain't gonna work, jackasses.

Saturday at 3:30 we'll be parked in front of our t.v. set cheering the team on, yelling extra loud for all of the nephews. Drop on by and join us if you don't go to the game. In the meantime . . .


Rise, all loyal Cougars and hurl your challenge to the foe.
We will fight, day or night, rain or snow.
Loyal, strong, and true
Wear the white and blue.
While we sing, get set to spring.
Come on, Cougars, it's up to you. Oh!

CHORUS:

Rise and shout, the Cougars are out
along the trail to fame and glory.
Rise and shout, our cheers will ring out
As you unfold your vict'ry story.
On you go to vanquish the foe
for Alma Mater's sons and daughters.
As we join in song in praise of you our faith is strong.
We'll raise our colors high in the blue
And cheer our Cougars of BYU.

Go Cougars!

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Bumping back the Mountain Dew Addiction

Okay, I popped on over and took a test, then another and another. It's possible I'm starting to enjoy this too much. I might have to go cold turkey. I might have to bump back my Mountain Dew addiction to get rid of this one. But in the meantime, even though I got a little carried away, enjoy.

Not a Jealous Bone in Your Body

You're secure, trusting, and giving with friends and lovers

And while you may have been hurt before, you've bounced back

You're generally happy with your life - and no one's grass is greener than yours

One word of caution: some may see your lack of jealousy as indifference!



Well, that's good to know. Lack of jealousy seen as indifference, are you kidding me? What? Am I supposed to be a raving lunatic just to assure some security in someone. Pshaw! Although, the rest of me sounds pretty cool.

Now I wonder if I'm right brained or left brained in love? Well, let's see . . .

You Are Right Brained In Love

Bit of a drama queen

Peacemaker, first to end a fight

Good at thinking up creative dates

Tend to fall in love and get hurt easily

Going with your gut instead of your head

Empathetic and caring, sometimes to a fault

Good at recognizing patterns in relationships

Been in love many times, perhaps too many to count

Wildly passionate and intense when falling in love

Spontaneous with relationships, going with the flow

Overly visual - can play back past dates like movies in your mind

Roses, love poems, and stuffed animals are a good start to winning your heart


Overly visual - can play back past dates like movies in your mind. Ha! I can't even remember who I had lunch with last week let alone past dates. I do know I'm in love with the most wonderful man in the world and I am definitely right brained (I know, the books are a tip off) so maybe they have something there.

You are a Believer

You believe in God and your chosen religion.

Whether you're Christian, Muslim, Jewish, or Hindu...

Your convictions are strong and unwavering.

You think your religion is the one true way, for everyone.

Duh! I know . . . for a writer I could have come up with something better. But hey -- there you have it.

Your Fragrance Profile

The best calming fragrance: vanilla

The best fragrance for everyday wear: orange

The best fragrance to boost your sex appeal: lavender

The best fragrance for energy: pine


Other than orange, and I prefer a soft melon color over regular orange, I can't really agree with the rest. Although I do love the smell of pine, which reminds me of Christmas, which reminds me, we only have 113 shopping days left!
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And just to stay within the theme of today, here's a past post: Dumb, Dumber and Dumbest! Help!

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Summer/Fall Reading List - So I'm late!

Reading is my thing. Everything in my life revolves around books. What can I say -- I can't help it.

I was cruising around the LDSBlog Webring I created and happened upon Karlene Browning's blogspot and a contest to win a couple of books. I have to admit it, I will stand up and say, "My name is Candace and I'm a bookaholic." Oh my word, I LOVE books. I can't get enough of them, ever! I have favorite authors and I'm always on the look out for new and intriguing ones.

But here's the list of books I've read this summer and the ones I still have yet to read. Since I read so quickly, books will be added to the list as I complete them.

Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen

Becoming Jane Austen by Jon Spence

Deep Fathom by James Rollins (Finished)

Meet Your Match by Stephanie Fowers (Finished)

Spires of Stone by Annette Lyon (Finished)

Prophecies - Signs of the Times, Second Coming, Millennium by Matthew B. Brown (In progress)

Silver Master (Ghost Hunters, Book 4) by Jayne Castle (Jayne Ann Krentz) (Finished) ***** out of Five

Eclipse (Twilight, Book 3) by Stephenie Meyer (Finished) **** out of Five

New Moon (Twilight, Book 2) by Stephenie Meyer (Finished) **** out of Five

Black Order: A Novel (Sigma Force Novels) by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

Map of Bones by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7) by J.K. Rowling (finished) ***** out of Five

Excavation by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

The Judas Strain by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

High Noon by Nora Roberts (Finished) **** out of Five

Ice Hunt by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

The Great and Terrible Fury & Light by Chris Stewart (Finished) ***** out of Five

Amazonia by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

Subterranean by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

Sandstorm by James Rollins (Finished) ***** out of Five

Valley of Silence (The Circle Trilogy, Book 3) by Nora Roberts (Finished) ***** out of Five

Dance of the Gods (The Circle Trilogy, Book 2) by Nora Roberts (Finished) ***** out of Five

Morrigan's Cross (The Circle Trilogy, Book 1) by Nora Roberts (Finished ***** out of Five

Up Close and Dangerous: A Novel by Linda Howard (Finished) **** out of Five

Raintree: Sanctuary (Silhouette Nocturne) by Beverly Barton (Finished) **** out of Five

Raintree: Haunted (Silhouette Nocturne) by Linda Winstead Jones (Finished) **** out of Five

Raintree: Inferno (Silhouette Nocturne) by Linda Howard (Finished) ***** out of Five

So there's my list and what I've finished thus far.

Candace E. Salima's Facebook profile Stephanie Fowers and Matthew Buckley got me hooked on Facebook. It's kind of cool!

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

A Novel Journey - Janette Rallison

I am so pleased to post an interview with the queen of Young Adult fiction, Janette Rallison. She's what you buy to make your teenage girls really, really happy!

What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

How to Take the Ex Out of Ex-boyfriend came out this summer. Like most of my books it's a light, fun, romantic comedy--guarenteed to make you laugh or your money back.

Giovanna's life is far from perfect, but she does have one thing going for her: her sweet, caring, and incredibly handsome boyfriend Jesse. The rest of her existence is filled with fighting with her step-mom and doing community service for a crime she did not commit, although the recovered evidence points to her. Things go from bad to worse, though, when her twin brother Dante challenges the most popular boy in school, Wilson, in the upcoming student president campaign and Jesse becomes Wilson's campaign manager. When she presses him for an explanation, all Jesse will tell her is that Wilson called in a favor. Furious at Jesse for being used by the opposing candidate, Giovanna breaks up with him and agrees to be Dante's campaign manager. After a few days, Giovanna begins to regret her rash decision as she realizes she still wants to be with Jesse. Now Giovanna and her friends must help get Dante elected while trying to get the opposing campaign managers back together.

Tell us about your journey to publication. How long had you been writing before you got the call you had a contract, how you heard and what went through your head.


I first got published in 1996-- twelve books ago. But you know what, it's still just as thrilling every time a new book comes out. They're sort of like babies, the first time you see them whole and complete you're awed, proud, and really tired of whole process.

Do you still experience self-doubt regarding your work?

Absolutely. Everytime I start a new project there is a little voice in my head that tells me, "This isn't a real book and it doesn't have enough strength to make it 200 plus pages." I just keep plugging away though because I'm used to those sorts of doubts. Luckily there comes a time with every book that I find I love the main character and her/his story. I want to finish it even if no one else likes the story and the editor rejects it. I want to finish it for me. That love is absolutely essential to keep me typing. Otherwise I don't think I'd have the stamina and energy to put in the work required to finish a novel.

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

Research your publisher thoroughly. Make sure you get a reputable, honest one that has the power to put your books in book stores. It does you very little good to publish a book and then only sell copies to your friends and family because no one else knows your book exists.

What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

Read a lot of writing books. They can help you avoid a lot of mistakes and can actually make the difference between publishing a book and forever remaining in the slush pile.

What’s the worst piece of writing advice you’ve ever heard?

Don't worry about marketing your book--that's what publishers have marketing departments for. Oh yeah, you have to market your book. Every year thousands of new books come out and most of them are completely overlooked. The only way anyone is ever going to hear about your book is if you get out there and tell them about it. This hasn't been easy for me, but I'm trying to be better about it. So all of you out there reading this: Hey, I've got a new book and it's really, really good!

What’s something you wish you’d know earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business?

See the answers to the last three questions.

Is there a particularly difficult set back that you’ve gone through in your writing career you are willing to share?

There are always hard, bad moments in writing. Those are called: Getting revision notes from your editor.

No, seriously I’ve definitely had some dark days. I think all writers write for the love of it. We write because we have stories and ideas inside of us that we want to share with the world. It’s a labor of love. I mean, think about it. In what other profession do you spend years devoting yourself to learning your craft and writing a novel before you ever even know if you’ll ever be paid one cent for it? Truck drivers would not haul things around for years just hoping that someday someone would appreciate their efforts and pay them something. But we do it all the time. So after devoting so much of ourselves to our craft it’s easy to get our feelings hurt when your publisher or the world in general doesn’t seem to appreciate you.

What are a few of your favorite books?

Um, all of mine. They all end exactly how I hoped they would. But besides Janette Rallison and Sierra St. James books, I like a lot of different books from different genres—from classic to new. Pride and Prejudice, Peter Pan, The Phantom Tollbooth, The Wizard of Earthsea, The Harry Potter series, (well, most of the books anyway) The Book Thief, The Doomsday Book, Monster Blood Tattoo, there are too many to mention.

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

All of my novels. Really, I couldn’t pick a favorite.

Do you have a pet peeve having to do with the business?

Oh yeah. I could write a whole book about things I don’t like about this business. Luckily the things I do like—writing, school visits, networking with other writers, going to conferences, connecting with readers—outweigh the bad in this business. In a nutshell I don’t like the marketing and self promotion that authors have to do. Publishers seem to have this catch 22 attitude about helping authors. They say (well usually they don’t say it to your face, they just think and act accordingly) we will only put our marketing dollars behind you if you’re a big author that will sell us lots of books. But how is an author going to become a big author without a publisher’s help? It seems like publishers choose a handful of authors to help and then everybody else is left to sink or swim on their own.

Take us through your process of writing a novel briefly—from conception to revision.

I get an idea. I grab some chocolate and eat it while I turn on the computer. This is probably the most important part of the creative process. I try to write between 2-4 pages a day. I've found (sadly) that I really only have about 2-4 pages worth of ideas per day. I'm hoping to one day be more creative. I think this will involve more chocolate.

Eventually after months of writing and rewriting and think my novel is perfect. Then I send it to my editor and my editor tells me that no, indeed it is far from perfect. I spend a complete day fuming and cursing his/her ignorance. I eat more chocolate.

Then I go about rewriting things in the novel to meet his/her revision comments. (It is easier to just do things their way than to argue with them about it. Trust me, I’ve tried.)

Surprisingly, amazingly, I find that after I’ve made changes the book is actually better. Hurrah! I send it back and eat more chocolate.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

I’ve got a lot of novels on the back burner that I want to write. I will be completely happy if I can write them all before I die. Eventually I’d like to try and write some screen plays too. But that’s a different form of writing and one I’d need to research and practice before I felt comfortable submitting anything.

Was there ever a time in your writing career you thought of quitting?

Oh yeah. I’ve come close to throwing in the towel a couple of times. One was just a few months ago. (Not really a good thing to contemplate when you have book contracts.) On some days an 8-5 job seems really tempting. On some days flipping burgers at Wendy’s seems like a viable alternative.

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

Writing. Marketing.

How much marketing/publicity do you do? Any advice in this area?

I don’t do nearly enough, but I’m trying to change that. My advice is to figure out what can be done in your genre, because for every genre it’s different.

Have you received a particularly memorable reader response?

Reader response is one of the things that keeps me going. I get a lot of emails from girls telling me that I’m their favorite author and that I’ve inspired them to become a writer. It just doesn’t get any better than that.

Parting words?

Write because you love to write.

Here is a list of available books Janette has written. Click on them to purchase.

The Revenge of the Cheerleaders (Oct 2, 2007 Available for Pre-Order)
How to Take the Ex Out of Ex-Boyfriend
It's a Mall World After All
Fame, Glory and Other Things On My To-Do List
Playing the Field
Life, Love and the Pursuit of Free Throws
All's Fair in Love, War and High School

Janette, thanks for dropping by and visiting with us. Good luck with your new book coming out in October!

Monday, August 27, 2007

Fred Thompson - 2008 Presidential Candidate

Presidential Candidate
Synopsis 3


Fred Thompson - Republican

For a man who hasn't even declared, Fred Thompson has garnered a tremendous amount of respect and support. It's a little difficult to find written informion regarding Fred Thompson's stances but I have done my best. He now has an official website, thank goodness. Here's a little more about Fred Thompson:

“Occasionally, doors have opened to me,” Senator Fred Dalton Thompson told Chris Wallace of Fox News Sunday in a recent interview, “and I had sense enough to see that they were opening, and I would walk through them.” Senator Thompson’s uniquely American life has been marked not only by recognizing opportunity when it arose, but by answering the call to public service and leadership.

It started in Sheffield, Ala., where he was born to Ruth and Fletcher Thompson on August 19, 1942. Soon after his birth, the tight-knit family moved just across the state line to nearby Lawrenceburg, Tenn., which embraced Thompson as a native son. There, he learned the importance of family, hard work, faith and education. He attended school, including Lawrence County High, during the week and the First Street Church of Christ on Sundays.

Even then, Thompson’s sharp sense of humor and knack for the dramatic had begun to show. Friends and coaches recall a football game in which Thompson lay at midfield, recovering from a particularly hard hit. When the coaching staff ran out to check on the prone Thompson, he looked up at them and asked, “How's the crowd taking it?"

Thompson, married while still in high school and graduated in 1960, would be the first member of his family to go on to college. He earned his undergraduate degree in philosophy and political science from Memphis State University in 1964 and his law degree from Vanderbilt University in 1967, working his way through school.

It was at Memphis State and Vanderbilt, Thompson recalls, that he linked the kitchen table politics and issues he’d grown up hearing to the “First Principles” of America’s founding embraced by the conservative movement – freedom, free markets, and the rule of law. “I read Sen. Barry Goldwater’s book, The Conscience of a Conservative, and the ideas were as clear as a church bell on a cold winter night,” Thompson says.

Thompson campaigned for Goldwater and, after graduating from law school, returned to Lawrenceburg to hang his shingle. Along the way, he founded a Young Republican Club, the first in an area of a state that was decidedly Democrat, and earned a seat on the county's Republican Executive Committee.

In 1968, while running a congressional campaign in Tennessee, Thompson would again be influenced by a leader of the modern-day conservative movement, then-Gov. Ronald Reagan. “I was 26 years old when I met him in Jackson, Tennessee,” Thompson recalls. “Governor Reagan came to help my guy and some others, and I had the privilege to sit back stage with him one-on-one. He was the nicest man I’ve ever met in politics. He asked me a few questions about the audience, and went out and gave a stirring speech. He had me for life.”

A year later, in 1969, Thompson was named an assistant United States attorney in Nashville, where he earned the reputation as a tough prosecutor. Three years later, he would help manage U.S. Senator Howard Baker’s re-election campaign. In 1973, at the age of 30, he was off to Washington, where he served under the glaring spotlight of the Watergate scandal as minority counsel to the Senate Watergate Committee.

Thompson earned attention back home for his counsel work. Friends in Tennessee still recall seeing the boy they’d grown up with on TV, sitting at the Senate hearing-room dais. He gained national attention for leading the line of inquiry that revealed the audio-taping system in the White House Oval Office. Later, he documented his role in the hearings, writing the book, At That Point in Time: The Inside Story of the Senate Watergate Committee.

Thompson would return to Tennessee, where he maintained law offices in Nashville and Washington. His practice varied from pro bono work to representing the state of Tennessee and large corporations, such as Westinghouse.

In 1977, Thompson walked through another door that would change the arc of his career forever. Marie Ragghianti turned to him after being fired from her position as chairman of the Tennessee Parole Board during the administration of Gov. Ray Blanton. Thompson confirmed that her firing was due to her refusal to release from prison felons who had bribed Blanton aides to buy their freedom. Blanton additionally set his media friends on her, smearing her reputation.

Thompson filed a suit challenging Marie Ragghianti’s dismissal. Later, she recalled for a reporter, “He told me that it was a real pleasure to represent someone that was the good guy. Which didn't mean that he was convinced we were gonna win. But anyway, he did a fine job, to put it mildly.”

In fact, a jury found in July, 1978, that Gov. Blanton had fired her “arbitrarily and capriciously” and ordered her reinstatement with an award of $38,000 for back pay. Ragghianti’s case would garner national attention, along with the publication of a book titled, simply, Marie. The book was later made into a film by the same name, in which Thompson was asked by the producers to portray himself.

Marie launched Thompson’s longstanding film and television career. Over the years, he’s appeared in more than 18 films, including No Way Out, In the Line of Fire, Die Hard II, Days of Thunder and The Hunt for Red October. Recently, he has become known for his portrayal of New York District Attorney Arthur Branch on the hit NBC show, Law & Order.

Between roles, Thompson continued his work as an attorney and public servant. He served as special counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1980 and the Senate Intelligence Committee in 1982. As an attorney, the founding “first principle” of the rule of law had shaped his life. In 1994, however, an opportunity arose that would enable him to utilize his full understanding of the founding principles for the American people.

Thompson ran to fill the remaining two years of an unexpired Senate term. It was a tough race; his Democrat opponent was a 6 term Congressman. Thompson refused to play by the establishment’s political rules. Down 20 points in the polls, Thompson undertook what has become a legendary campaign. Driving a red pickup truck, he took to the highways and back roads of the Volunteer State, talking to Tennessee citizens from the back of what became the symbol of his campaign. He said it made him comfortable—taking him back to the days of his Dad’s used car lot in Lawrenceburg.

Thompson spoke about the need for a competent and ethical federal government, reminding voters of the importance of self-government and lower taxes. His effort paid off, and the message took. He moved from 20 points down to winning by 20 points. Thompson’s margin of victory and his independent approach to campaigning was not lost in a year where the GOP was swept into leadership in “Contract with America” sweep that year.

Two years later, in 1996, the people of Tennessee returned him to office with more votes than any candidate for any office in the state’s history. Voters seemed to like the lawmaker they’d elected who had an independent streak that seemed to go with “towering 6-foot, 5-inch frame, basso voice and commanding presence,” that the Austin American-Statesman recently described.

His overarching philosophy, was clear from the beginning. “He believes in limiting the jurisdiction of the federal government – and that there are adequate local laws to take care of that problem,” a former Thompson chief of staff told a reporter. Thompson recently laid his Federalism ideas out in a long post on the popular, grassroots site, RedState.

During his time in the Senate, Thompson focused on three key areas: lowering our taxes, strengthening national security, and what the American-Statesman called “the unglamorous work of trying to expose waste” and to change the federal government. All have taken on even greater importance today than they had back then. In each of these areas, Thompson accomplished a great deal.

Reforms

  • As Chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, Thompson enacted a law that required federal agencies to calculate and report the cost of regulations on taxpayers and businesses.
  • Press reports stated: “He put heat on federal agencies by holding hearings on mismanagement and by asking them to tote up the improper payments they made each year.” That added up to about $20 billion in taxpayer dollars. His efforts saved taxpayers more than $2 billion in 2005-06 along at the the Department of Health and Human Services.
  • He published a two volume report, “Government on the Brink,” detailing the waste, fraud, and abuse of federal agencies as well as the management challenges facing the incoming Bush Administration. Paul Light, a New York University professor and leading expert on government, said, “I consider him to be one of the most dedicated overseers of the executive branch of the last 25 years.”
  • Twenty-five years after he’d gained national prominence as hard-charging counsel on the Watergate committee, Thompson again stepped into the investigation spotlight. In 1997, as chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, he opened an investigation into attempts by the Chinese government to influence America policies and elections through, among other means, financing election campaigns. The investigation identified at least six Democrat donors and fundraisers, with ties to the Clinton Administration, who had laundered or aided in the laundering and distribution of foreign money into Democrat political party coffers. The investigation also exposed two Democrat Party donors with “a long-term relationship with a Chinese intelligence agency," according to the Senate committee’s report.

Taxes

  • In his eight years, Thompson, who served on the Finance Committee, supported and worked to enact three major tax-cut bills, reducing the federal tax burden on all of us.

National Security

  • As a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Thompson focused on the threat of nuclear proliferation and technology transfers that could damage American industrial nd national security.
  • While a vocal supporter of free trade, Thompson has also fought to link free trade to our national security interests. For example, when voting to grant full-trading status to China, Senator Thompson fought unsuccessfully to include an amendment in the bill that would have required the president to impose sanctions against China if it violated nuclear-nonproliferation agreements.
  • Thompson also served on the Intelligence Committee at a time when it examined the failings in intelligence and analysis leading into the September 11th terrorist attacks, as well as the reforms needed to better prepare for future threats.
In March 2002, in the aftermath of the loss of his adult daughter, Senator Thompson announced that he would not seek re-election to the Senate. He has two sons who live in Nashville. He retired with an 86% American Conservative Union rating and a 100% rating from National Right to Life.

Divorced in 1985, he remarried in 2002. He and Jeri have a three-and-a-half year old daughter, and a seven-month old son.

In the tradition of President George Washington, a leader Thompson had admired growing up, he walked away from an easy reelection victory to seek new challenges. He joined the American Enterprise Institute as a visiting scholar, traveled the country as speaker and served on a Wall Street advisory board.

In 2005, Thompson was named by President Bush as an advisor to Supreme Court Chief Justice nominee John Roberts, helping to move his nomination through the Senate confirmation process. Thompson continued his public service as chairman of the State Department’s International Security Advisory Board.

In all this, Thompson has been a man of the times and a man for the times, adapting his unique abilities and leveraging today’s communications technologies to speak to the American people about issues he feels are important to the nation. Whether it’s on the radio, filling in for Paul Harvey on the ABC Network with news and commentaries, on his own “Fred Thompson Reports” commentaries and broadcasts, online blog posts or TV appearances, Thompson has focused on the issues of the day viewed through the “first principles” he’s stressed throughout his career.

He’s talked about big issues and challenges our nation is facing now, and will face tomorrow:

  • The ongoing threat of Islamist terrorism
  • The unresolved economic threat of entitlements
  • The need for lower taxes to ensure our nation remains economically competitive and innovative
  • The need to secure our borders
  • The need to support families and to protect our children from the harder edges of culture
  • The need to remain engaged in the world while remaining true to America’s principles
In early 2007, Thompson embarked on what he calls a “dialogue” with the American people, through his various venues, to determine whether there was a desire among American voters for him to enter Republican Presidential race. Along the way, sites such as “Draft Fred Thompson,” “Fred Head” and “Fred Facts” proliferated online. In June, Thompson filed papers that would allow him to raise funds to further explore a presidential run.

One can’t help but see that Thompson again might be hearing the call to serve. As he discussed less than six months ago, a door is opening and this time Fred Dalton Thompson may lead all of America through it." Official Bio pulled from here.

Here is Law and Order's tough District Attorney's stance on the issues of the day:

Abortion: In a NewsMax report dated June 19, 2007, Fred Thompson stated: ""When I was in the Senate a lot of people would come to see me and it usually would have to do with business matters or financial matters, or something pertaining to their financial welfare. When you came to see me," Thompson said to the crowd of pro-life activists, "I always knew it was about something much more important than that, the most important thing of all in this world, and that is life."

"I must say that those issues are even more profound to me as the years go by. Jeri [his wife] and I have truly been blessed," he added.

"Thompson then went on to highlight his pro-life record, and made explicit his stance on a number of contentious life and family issues. "In 1994 I made my first run for the US Senate and I was proud to receive the National Right to Life endorsement," said Thompson. "I've been with you ever since, and you've been with me ever since."

"On abortion related votes I've been 100 percent…On stem cell research, I'm for adult stem cell research, not stem cell research where embryos of unborn children are destroyed. It looks to me like there is a lot of promising developments as far as adult stem cell research is concerned anyway and we don't need to go down that other road."

"Thompson also added that so-called partial birth abortion is more like "infanticide."

"According to a NewsMax report, in 1994 Thompson stated that he was not in favor of criminalizing abortion on an Eagle Forum survey, while in 1996 he said on a Christian Coalition questionnaire that he was "opposed" to a constitutional amendment that would have protected the sanctity of human life. He also stated in a campaign policy, the date of which NewsMax does not specify, that he did not believe that the government should legislate on early term abortions, saying "the decision to have an early term abortion is a moral issue and should not be a legal one." And perhaps most worrisome for conservative voters, is Thompson's statement to a Tennessee newspaper that, "The ultimate decision on abortion should be left with the woman and not the government."

"Nevertheless, compared to the various other GOP front-runners, Thompson does appear to have a solid record, and has always voted on the side of pro-life and pro-family. As such, many conservatives are enthused about the possibility of a man with apparently solid convictions on matters of life and family who is willing to fill the void of truly conservative, high-profile GOP candidates."

Summary: While Thompson's statements seem to be all over the board here, his voting record clearly shows that he is a pro-life candidate. I read several newspapers and interviews and opinion is varied on his true stance.

Budget and Economy: Other than what was in his bio, literally, all I could find was his voting record on this topic, which speaks for itself:
  • Voted YES on prioritizing national debt reduction below tax cuts. (Apr 2000) -- Vote to table [kill] an amendment that would increase the amount of the budget that would be used to reduce the national debt by $75 billion over 5 year. The debt reduction would be offset by reducing the tax cut in the budget framework from $150 billion.
  • Voted NO on 1998 GOP budget. (May 1997) -- Approval of the 1998 GOP Budget which would cut spending and taxes.
  • Voted YES on Balanced-budget constitutional amendment. (Mar 1997) -- Approval of the balanced-budget constitutional amendment.
Summary: I just don't know what to think about Fred Thompson in this arena. While it is wise to reduce the budget, I would have started cutting pork from all the bills to reduce the debt rather than taxing the hell out of the American people. I would have voted Yes on the 1998 GOP Budget -- assuming the pork wasn't out of control, which it may have been. And I would have voted with Fred on the balanced budget amendment although why we need an amendment to stop being stupid I couldn't begin to tell you. Everywhere else I looked for information on this topic was too biased one way or the other, so I didn't feel good about putting any of it in this blog. Hopefully Fred will cover this on his website soon.

Education: Again, information is sparse, so I'm going with his voting record one more time:
  • Voted NO on funding smaller classes instead of private tutors. (May 2001) -- Vote to authorize a federal program aimed at reducing class size. The plan would assist states and local education agencies in recruiting, hiring and training 100,000 new teachers, with $2.4 billion in fiscal 2002. This amendment would replace an amendment allowing parents with children at under-performing schools to use public funding for private tutors.
  • Voted NO on funding student testing instead of private tutors. (May 2001) -- Vote to pass an amendment that would authorize $200 million to provide grants to help states develop assessment systems that describe student achievement. This amendment would replace an amendment by Jeffords, R-VT, which would allow parents with children at under-performing schools to use public funding for private tutors.
  • Voted NO on spending $448B of tax cut on education & debt reduction. (Apr 2001) -- Vote to reduce the size of the $1.6 trillion tax cut by $448 billion while increasing education spending by $250 billion and providing an increase of approximately $224 billion for debt reduction over 10 years.
  • Voted YES on Educational Savings Accounts. (Mar 2000) -- Vote to pass a bill that would permit tax-free savings accounts of up to $2000 per child annually to be used for public or private school tuition or other education expenses.
  • Voted YES on allowing more flexibility in federal school rules. (Mar 1999) -- This vote was a motion to invoke cloture on a bill aimed at allowing states to waive certain federal rules normally required in order to use federal school aid. [A YES vote implies support of charter schools and vouchers].
  • Voted YES on education savings accounts. (Jun 1998) -- This Conference Report approved tax-sheltered education savings accounts.
  • Voted YES on school vouchers in DC. (Sep 1997) -- This legislation would have amended the DC spending measure, imposing an unconstitutional school voucher program on the District.
  • Voted YES on $75M for abstinence education. (Jul 1996) -- Vote to retain a provision of the Budget Act that funds abstinence education to help reduce teenage pregnancy, using $75 million of the Maternal and Child Health Block Grant Program.
Summary: Okay, I admit it. My head is starting to hurt. I would have voted yes on funding the increased hiring of teachers and smaller classrooms. It wouldn't hurt parents to become involved in their children's education a little more and take advantage of the tutoring programs available at libraries and boys and girls clubs. I'm with him on the student testing issue. I agree with him on the tax cut issue. Definitely with him on the Educational Savings Accounts, both votes. I stand with him on the federal school rules. Definitely support him on the school vouchers vote. And I 100% support him on the abstinence education. So, to sum all that up, I agreed with him on all but one vote. That's not a bad record.

Energy and Oil: 3rd Verse, same as the first. Thank Goodness for the On the Issues website.
  • Solar system is warming, not earth. (Apr 2007) -- Some people think that our planet is suffering from a fever. Now scientists are telling us that Mars is experiencing its own planetary warming: Martian warming. It seems scientists have noticed recently that quite a few planets in our solar system seem to be heating up a bit, including Pluto. NASA says the Martian South Pole's ice cap has been shrinking for three summers in a row. Maybe Mars got its fever from earth. If so, I guess Jupiter's caught the same cold, because it's warming up too, like Pluto. This has led some people, not necessarily scientists, to wonder if Mars and Jupiter, non-signatories to the Kyoto Treaty, are actually inhabited by alien SUV-driving industrialists who run their air-conditioning at 60 degrees and refuse to recycle. Silly, I know, but I wonder what all those planets, dwarf planets and moons in our SOLAR system have in common. Solar? I wonder. Nah, the science is absolutely decided. There's a consensus. Ask Galileo. Source: Thompson's blog on ABCradio.com, "Plutonic Warming" Apr 13, 2007
  • Voted YES on drilling ANWR on national security grounds. (Apr 2002) -- Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Murkowski Amendment No. 31323; To create jobs for Americans, to reduce dependence on foreign sources of crude oil and energy, to strengthen the economic self determination of the Inupiat Eskimos and to promote national security. Would allow gas and oil development in a portion of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge if the president certifies to Congress that production in the area is in the nation's security and economic interests (which Prsident Bush would). If the cloture motion is agreed to, debate will be limited and a vote will occur. If the cloture motion is rejected debate could continue indefinitely and instead the bill is usually set aside. A yea vote for this bill was one in favor of drilling in the reserve. Three-fifths of the total Senate (60) is required to invoke cloture.
  • Voted YES on terminating CAFE standards within 15 months. (Mar 2002) -- Levin Amendment No. 2997; To provide alternative provisions to better encourage increased use of alternative fueled and hybrid vehicles. Vote to pass an amendment that would remove the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standard (CAFE) and instead establish a new automobile efficiency standard in 15 months. Congress could veto any CAFE increase and would be allowed to increase the standard if no changes are made with 15 months. The bill would overhaul the nation's energy policies by restructuring the electricity system and providing for $16 billion in energy-related tax incentives.
  • Voted YES on preserving budget for ANWR oil drilling. (Apr 2000) -- Vote to preserve language in the Fiscal Year 2001 Budget Framework that assumes $1.2 billion in revenue from oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge [ANWR] in Alaska.
  • Voted NO on ending discussion of CAFE fuel efficiency standards. (Sep 1999) -- Senators Feinstein (D-CA) and Bryan (D-NV) introduced a resolution expressing the sense of the Senate towards ending CAFE Standards. Senator Gorton motioned to table this amendment. [A YES vote is considered pro-business].
  • Voted YES on defunding renewable and solar energy. (Jun 1999) -- In June of 1999, Senator Jeffords (R-VT) was prepared to offer an amendment which would have added $62 million to the Energy Department solar and renewable energy programs. This action was blocked by Senator Reid (D-NV).
  • Voted YES on approving a nuclear waste repository. (Apr 1997) -- Approval of the interim nuclear waste repository. The repository would be located at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, with an integrated management system for storage and permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste. Voting YES would authorize the President with sole and unreviewable discretion to determine the suitability of the Yucca Mountain site.
Summary: I agreed with right down the line until the last one. I didn't agree at the time and I'm glad things changed. I'd say the man knows his energy crises, created by the government's allowal of the EPA to run completely wild, and what to do about them. He's got a big A+ from me on this.

Illegal Immigration: On the Pew Forum Religion and Public Life website, it was reported that "Thompson said there is "no good solution" to the problem of illegal immigration but that border enforcement must come before any other legislation. He criticized Mexican President Philipe Calderon's leftist economic policies for contributing to illegal immigration. While he was a member of the Senate, Thompson voted to allow more temporary immigrant workers and more highly skilled immigrants. He also voted to limit welfare benefits for legal immigrants."

Summary: I'm with him all the way on that. He wants solid border enforcement and has attempted to find reasonable solutions to the illegal immigration problem. I know Chris Cannon says we just can't round up all up and send 'em back . . . but somebody, somewhere has got to find a solution and amnesty is not it. Thompson is not for amnesty!

Right to Keep and Bear Arms: Fred Thompson is very pro 2nd Amendment, much to the dismay of the liberal across the nation. In the National Review, Thompson stated, "The statistics are clear. Communities that recognize and grant Second Amendment rights to responsible adults have a significantly lower incidence of violent crime than those that do not. More to the point, incarcerated criminals tell criminologists that they consider local gun laws when they decide what sort of crime they will commit, and where they will do so. . .

"In recent years, however, armed Americans — not on-duty police officers — have successfully prevented a number of attempted mass murders. Evidence from Israel, where many teachers have weapons and have stopped serious terror attacks, has been documented. Supporting, though contrary, evidence from Great Britain, where strict gun controls have led to violent crime rates far higher than ours, is also common knowledge.

Summary: Thompson is clearly pro 2nd Amendment, as I stated, and knows the value of the Constitution as it was written by our founding fathers.

Tax Reform: In the Opinion Journal it was reported, "Mr. Thompson says those tough choices shouldn't include the tax increases contemplated in the new budget released by Senate Democrats this week. "The phony static accounting the government uses has obscured just how successful the 2003 tax cuts have been in boosting the economy," he says. "Lower marginal tax rates have proven to be a key to prosperity now by Kennedy, Reagan and Bush. It's time millionaires serving in the Senate learned not to overly tax other people trying to get wealthy."

His voting records stand as this:
  • Progressive tax redistributes wealth without helping economy. (Jun 2007) -- While serving in the US Senate, Fred Thompson was a consistent proponent for lower taxes and a more simplified tax system. He hasn't changed his mind.Thompson says, "We need to reject taxes that punish rather than reward success. Those who say they want a "more progressive" tax system should be asked one question: Are you really interested in tax rates that benefit the economy and raise revenue--or are you interested in redistributing income for political reasons?"
  • Taxes burden production; keep rates as low as possible. (May 2007) -- Taxes are necessary. But they don't make the country any better off. At best they simply move money from the private sector to the government. But taxes are also a burden on production, because they discourage people from investing & taking risks. Some economists have calculated that today each additional $1 collected by the government, by raising income-tax rates, makes the private sector as much as $2 worse off. To me this means one simple thing: tax rates should be as low as possible.
  • Tax cuts stimulate the economy. (Apr 2007) -- There is reason to smile this tax season. The results of the experiment that began when Congress passed a series of tax-rate cuts in 2001 & 2003 are in. Supporters of those cuts said they would stimulate the economy. Opponents predicted ever-increasing budget deficits and national bankruptcy unless tax rates were increased, especially on the wealthy. In fact, Treasury statistics show that tax revenues have soared and the budget deficit has been shrinking faster than even the optimists projected. Since the first tax cuts were passed, when I was in the Senate, the budget deficit has been cut in half.Critics claimed that across-the-board tax cuts were some sort of gift to the rich but, on the contrary, the wealthy are paying a greater percentage of the national bill than ever before. The richest 1% of Americans now pays 35% of all income taxes. The top 10% pay more taxes than the bottom 60%. Because of lower rates, money is being invested in our economy instead of being sheltered from the taxman.
  • Voted NO on reducing marriage penalty instead of cutting top tax rates. (May 2001) -- Vote to expand the standard deduction and 15% income tax bracket for couples. The elimination of the "marriage penalty" tax would be offset by reducing the marginal tax rate reductions for the top two rate bracket.
  • Voted NO on increasing tax deductions for college tuition. (May 2001) -- Vote to increase the tax deduction for college tuition costs from $5,000 to $12,000 and increase the tax credit on student loan interest from $500 to $1,000. The expense would be offset by limiting the cut in the top estate tax rate to 53%.
  • Voted YES on eliminating the 'marriage penalty'. (Jul 2000) -- Vote on a bill that would reduce taxes on married couples by increasing their standard deduction to twice that of single taxpayers and raise the income limits on both the 15 percent and 28 percent tax brackets for married couples to twice that of singles.
  • Voted YES on across-the-board spending cut. (Oct 1999) -- The Nickles (R-OK) Amdendment would express the sense of the Senate that Congress should adopt an across-the-board cut in all discretionary funding, to prevent the plundering of the Social Security Trust Fund.
  • Voted YES on requiring super-majority for raising taxes. (Apr 1998) -- Senator Kyl (R-AZ) offered an amendment to the 1999 budget resolution to express the sense of the Senate on support for a Constitutional amendment requiring a supermajority to pass tax increases.
Summary: There's not really any other way to say this. Fred's in our corner on this. He's opposed to taxing the American people into bankruptcy.

War on Terror: "I listen to the Democratic congressional leaders and I hear them talking about how many (House and Senate) seats they're going to pick up because of this war.... I listened to one of their presidential candidates talk about that this is a phony war, the war on terror. This is what passes for policy today in the Democratic Party." Thompson was quoted as saying on the American Thinker website.

From The Fred Factor: How Fred Thompson May Change The Face Of The '08 Campaign by Steve Gill Thompson said: "We've got to rectify the mistakes that we've made. We went in there too light, wrong rules of engagement, wrong strategy, placed too much emphasis on just holding things in place while we built up the Iraqi army, took longer than we figured.

"Wars are full of mistakes. You rectify things. I think we're doing that now.

"Why would we not take any chance, even though there are certainly no guarantees, to not be run out of that place? I mean, we've got to take that opportunity & give it a chance to work."

Also from the same book we read: "The strategic center of gravity for this war is American willpower. Our enemies know that they cannot defeat us in any conventional military contest, so instead, their aim is to demoralize us, to shake our resolve. They know that their only hope is in gruesome, made-for-TV atrocities to undermine the confidence of the American public. Their purpose is not to win, but to convince us that we can't win, to break our will, to convince us to cut and run. Unfortunately, that strategy is not illogical. We have run before.

"Past failures of will are among the main reasons we are under siege today. Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990 because he believed that Americans couldn't take casualties. He looked at Vietnam & Lebanon and concluded that the Americans didn't have the guts for a really tough fight. America's failure to confront Saddam during the 1990s, as he thwarted weapons inspectors and economic sanctions and corrupted the oil for food program, only spurred him further."

Summary: Fred Thompson completely understand the wears, whys and what fors of the War on Terror.

This was a "not so brief" summary of Fred Thompson. I had to pull from many, many sources in order to gather this information. His official website, while still be added to, is the best place to learn more about this presidential candidate.



Sunday, August 26, 2007

Robert Frost: Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening

Robert Frost has given us volumes of beautiful poetry depicting American life in a unique way through the tool of prose.

When I was a teenager our church hosted a talent show. For Cortez, Colorado, which was a small community, we had an astonishing amount of talent. But the act I remember most that evening was my brother's musical composition of Robert Frost's Stopping By Woods on a Snow Evening.

He sat on the stage bent over his guitar as a spotlight shone on him. His beautiful tenor voice soared out over the auditorium and this poem forever found a place in my heart.

This song was never recorded, sadly, and so it lives only in my mind. Some day, I'll ask Cash, that would be my brother, to see if he can remember the melody he composed and record it. If so, I will post it on this blog. For I am very proud of that dear brother of mine.

Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

And moving away from my brother and back to Robert Frost. Those last three lines have echoed in my mind for thirty some odd years. But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before sleep.

If you don't mind me taking a quick turn to religious thought. I know that promises were made in premortality. There are people that each of us promised to find and we promised to bring the gospel to them.

As I go through my daily life I often wonder if I run across the paths of anyone I made this promise to --- have I made the necessary choices to put me in the place where I can cross their paths?

I don't know. I know when I meet someone and there is an instant connection and the feeling swarms over me, I've known you my entire life - where have you been? Then I believe I have found someone to whom I made a promise or they made a promise to me.

And so, when those words ring in my mind, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before sleep, it is that which I keep in mind.

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Another families.com post I wrote: Compass to the World.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Oh, That's What It Means!

There's something about the majesty of God's creation, every mountain, valley, river and lake that just remind me who's ultimately in charge.

This just makes me want to toss out a blanket, lean up against a tree and open a good book. Then take a really long nap.

I don't even know where this is? I know it's called Three Rivers . . . anyone have an idea?

Now back to the inanity of these tests.

Make sure to see my comments after this!

Your Birthdate: July 26

You lucked out with the skills to succeed in almost any arena.

Put you in almost any business or classroom, and you'll rise to the top.

You're driven and intense, but you also know when to kick back and cooperate.

Your ability to adapt to almost any situation is part of what's going to make you a success.

Your strength: Your attention to detail

Your weakness: You can be a little too proud of your successes

Your power color: Turquoise

Your power symbol: Arrow pointing up

Your power month: August

What Does Your Birth Date Mean?

I don't like the color turquoise and my power symbol is pointing up? Okay, up could indicate that I'm reaching toward the heavens, but come on, I want my power symbol to be that of an African lion in full roar! And my favorite color . . . look to the colors of the sunset and we might be getting close.

Why would my power month be August when my birthday is in July? Of course the light of my life, my husband, was born in August, so maybe that's okay.

And well, the rest of it . . . okay, that's true. I should be the CEO of a huge corporation by now, either that or outselling Nora Roberts. Now, how cool would that be?

Check this song from Marie, it was always one of my favorites: Read My Lips



Great song, isn't it?
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Today the son of a friend is being buried. His obituary reads:

Daily Herald

Clayton Sean Barnes passed away while serving his country as an Apache helicopter pilot on Monday, August 20, 2007. Clayton was born on March 24, 1977, in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He joined the Utah National Guard when he was 17 years old, and has been proudly serving with them for the last 13 years. He always knew he wanted to follow in his father's footsteps and become a helicopter pilot. Clayton, who was known by his fellow aviators as "Buddha," achieved the rank of Chief Warrant Officer 2, and he felt honored to be able to fight for the country he loved by serving a tour of duty in Afghanistan.

Clayton packed more experiences into his 30 years on Earth than most people do in a lifetime. He served in the Manila Philippines Mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He graduated from Brigham Young University and was just beginning dental school. He married the love of his life, Melinda Daniels, in the Mt. Timpanogos Temple on February 11, 2000, and his life revolved around her and their three children. Clayton was very excited about the upcoming birth of their fourth child, a baby girl, due this November. He always made time for his family, and one of his greatest joys in life was making his kids laugh.

We'll remember Clayton for so many reasons. He was always willing to help those in need. He had a strong belief in his religion, and he loved sharing his testimony with others. He loved learning, spending time with friends, riding dirt bikes, flying, snowboarding, and teaching his kids how to rip it up on their battery-powered Hummer.

Most of all, we'll remember Clayton's smile. He was always happy; no matter when you saw him you knew he'd have a huge grin on his face. He loved life, he adored his family, and his happiness was contagious--you couldn't help smiling when you were with him. Clayton was the rock of his family, the person everyone knew they could rely on. Even though it was much too short, his life was full, and it was always filled with joy. We know he's still smiling at us from up in Heaven. We love you Clayton.

Clayton is survived by his wife, Melinda, his children, his parents, Susan Linda Covington and Charles Scott Barnes, his brothers, Christian and Chad, his sisters, Susannah and Summer, and many nieces and nephews.

Clayton's viewing will be held on Friday, August 24, 2007 from 7:00-9:00 p.m. and on Saturday, August 25, 2007 from 10:00-10:45 a.m. at the LDS Stake Center on 650 W 800 South in Payson, Utah. His funeral will also be held at the Stake Center on Saturday at 11:00 a.m. Funeral services are being provided by SereniCare Funeral Directors. Clayton will be buried in the Orem City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the "In Memory of Clayton Barnes" fund at any Wells Fargo bank. Online condolences may be submitted to www.serenicare.com.

This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page C4

There is very little I can add to this. My heart grieves for Scott and the family. They were in our ward at one time, although Clayton was already on his mission when we moved in. I pray that the Lord pours comfort, peace, and the calming balm of Gilead upon this family, and I pray that they receive it.

Two Utah Guard Pilots Killed -- 23 August 2007
National Guard Releases Names of Fallen Pilots -- 23 August 2007
Crash Kills 2 Soldiers in Cedar Valley -- 22 August 2007

Friday, August 24, 2007

Health Tip: 5HTP and Depression

5HTP is an advanced form of Tryptophan (oh yeah, that's the stuff that makes you really sleepy when you eat a big turkey dinner.) The nice thing about 5HTP is that it increases the levels of serotonin in your body. Now, I know you may be saying, "So what?"

Well, settle in and let me explain. The last 18 months of my life have been, shall we say, the roller coaster ride from hell. One psychological, emotional and physical trauma after another. Without going into detail, multiple deaths of close family members, near deaths and long weeks of recovery for others, surgeries, etc. were just a little of what happened in our lives. The day my father was told he had inoperable, terminal cancer and had only weeks to live was the straw that broke my camel's back.

I remember dissolving into tears that wouldn't stop. I couldn't think. I couldn't make decisions. I couldn't focus. There was no trace of the Candace Salima that I knew visible to me. I broke down and went to my family doctor. When Dr. Robert Taylor walked into the exam room, I was sitting on a chair, with my arm stretched across the exam table, my head resting on my arm, sound asleep. He woke me up, took one look at me and said I no longer had a choice. He was putting me on a mild antidepressant.

Here's a little something about me that you don't know. I am one of the most cautious people regarding the use of drugs, antidepressants, antibiotics and more. I don't go to the doctor unless I've tried everything I can, using natural means, to rectify the problem myself. This is how I came by the old-fashioned moniker "wise woman." I've spent a lifetime studying herbs, supplements, natural therapies and the benefits thereof. Dr. Taylor knew this. So he proceeded to tell me of the benefits of Lexapro, that it was very mild, non-narcotic, etc. I agreed to begin taking it and it was like the sun begin to shine once again.

A few weeks ago I decided I didn't want to take it anymore. I hate, I really hate, being dependent on any type of drug. Life seemed to have evened out. Family members were healthy and healing. Things were starting to look up. I wanted to stop taking the Lexapro. So I started doing research. Oh yeah, the Candace I knew was back. I started weaning myself off Lexapro.

Here's where we start talking about 5HTP. Serotonin is a chemical messenger in the brain that affects emotions, behavior, thought, weight and sleep patterns. Severe emotional and psychological stress, copious amounts of caffeine, ill health and depression cause the reduced production of serotonin. 5HTP triggers the production of serotonin in your body. This is a very, very good thing, obviously. Add a healthy diet and some exercise and you're in a whole new ballgame.

I became very ill about three weeks and found out I couldn't take simple cold medicine if I was on the Lexapro. So I stopped, cold turkey. (Respiratory flus really, really suck.) But I immediately began thinking: "What was the point of writing anymore books, no one is reading them anyway." (So, not true.) "Why should I work so hard, nothing ever, ever, happens." (Again, really not true.) But these were the thoughts I had. I don't have suicidal thoughts, I have thoughts about just quitting life, going into my garden with a book and a tall frosty lemonade and saying "To hell with the world." If you know me, that's is SOOOOOO unlike me. I have to save the world, it's hard-coded into my DNA. (Yeah, I know. Not doing such a great job. But what' s a girl to do?)

I found that 5HTP is the answer to my problems. I started taking it two weeks ago, and wahlah! I am a new woman. I woke up feeling good today, well except for that nasty bronchitis which is clinging to my sinuses with the last vestiges of desperation.

I feel like exercising today, which I will do as soon I am done blogging. I feel like cleaning my house (quick, call the doctor, there's something wrong.) I feel like getting things in order again, which is the only way I am happy.

Kerry Lynn Blair's Mt. Rushwritenomore has been crested and I am skiing down those slopes to the Valley of Literary Muse. That muse has sure been missing lately. Somebody needs to kick her butt for lying down on the job.

Anyway, so the health tip boils down to this. If you're struggling with depression, interrupted sleep patterns, and the like, talk to your doctor and decide if you'd like to give 5HTP a try. You can pick it up at your local herb store. Inexpensive, no side-effects and you can still take cold medicine.

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Here's another interest post from my days at www.families.com: Absalom, O Absalom