The day we arrived, we walked a mile or so before it got dark…
We all have big dreams about people getting along without violence…
Love is the only force that can transform an enemy to a friend.
– Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Five daily blogs about life's 5 big choices on five different sites.
The day we arrived, we walked a mile or so before it got dark…
We all have big dreams about people getting along without violence…
Love is the only force that can transform an enemy to a friend.
– Martin Luther King, Jr.
Next Blog


So many people make this overwhelmingly common mistake, including me. We wait for permission to do great work.
Go! Live like you mean it. Life is not a dress rehearsal.
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Some people close to us live a love life like a movie script. The script that balances the ups and downs, but focuses on the ups while never sugar-coating the downs. here’s a perfect example…
My friend, Patty Hebert returns to offer a great example of what Love really is.
Movies, especially those not produced by The Mouse, flood the media and bombard our senses with their own branding of love. In many, like the 1999 remake of the Thomas Crown Affair, love’s passion is drunken, explosive, violent and pushing the envelope on abusive. And if we buy into these ideals and believe in alcohol pouring off of cleared off tables and embraces met and returned on cold marble stairs, then we are setting ourselves up for catastrophic failure. For when the glass and alcohol are cleaned up; what’s left?
As my husband and I grow older together, I am reminded of my grandparents, who shared a worldly love for over 65 years. Better than the movies, in daily living color, they lived the tenet that love is a decision and a promise made to each other. It’s not glamorous or wrapped up in fine arts, jewels or fast cars, but instead it is subtle and keep alive with daily small, almost hidden, acts of kindness. And yes, my grandparents had their moments, like all couples. But their promise to each other enabled them to put their differences aside, and find the solution that would bring them back together.
Later in life, when my grandparents required more care, they moved in with my aunt and uncle, and there, I got to witness the most profound gift of their love. Each and every evening, when they were tucked into bed, as they fell asleep, my grandparents held hands. Just as in the day, whatever the night time brought, they would face it together. Hollywood, that is love.
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Today we have a story from Josh Brooker, and he is the 21-year old middle son of long-time friends of ours.
Brian Brooker, Josh’s Father, and the two other brothers took a cross-country road trip this summer. And Josh produced a captivating video documentary. The production, narration, music, editing – a stunning artist expression of Manifest Destiny.
If you have 16 minutes to allow yourself to be taken on a youthful, entertaining, and profoundly insightful look at dreams and age-old questions, and want to take a trip down memory lane when, at 21, you yourself had these same dreams and questions, then click here.
Before you decide to click away, I didn’t mention – this is award-winning cinematography and storytelling. At nine minutes into Josh’s manifesto, I began to get teary-eyed. I’m not making this recommendation lightly, and I understand your insane schedule.
You will thank (me) Josh later, but only if you have the self-discipline to slow down, take a deep breathe, and watch.
(next blog)