An Update From Jessica at Wheaton…
Towards the end of last year, we took on the challenge of helping out a very special person stay in school through the rest …
Towards the end of last year, we took on the challenge of helping out a very special person stay in school through the rest …
We are often conditioned to believe that the resolution, betterment or answer for a given problem is rooted in the addition of something. We …
We’ve all heard the phrase “…the road less traveled.” We often look back on situations and marvel at how unexpected the path to our …
The frost has bid what we hope to be it’s final farewell. The Sun, after a rather extended holiday it seems, has returned to …
“Look at your man, now back to me, now back at your man, now back to ME!” Unless one has been living under …
Google’s decision to second-guess its relationship with China has raised some interesting questions recently. Namely, whether Google’s decision sprang from their moral opposition to censorship, or simply from a decreased financial interest in a country with a much more popular search engine, known as Baidu. So far, the controversy appears to be more of a commercial, as opposed to a political dilemma. A private, business-related concern. But whenever the question of morality, of a battle between good (Google) and evil, comes into play in the news, you can be sure that the blogosphere will start freaking out.
I FULLY plan to slide into my parking spot in heaven SIDEWAYS with Jamie and the kids yelling, “HOLY SH**! What a RIDE!!” How …
I get a lot of tweets, facebooks posts, and emails messages. Even actual thank-you cards and letters via snail mail. But I have never …
It was a heavy and wet morning when the trees let out quiet sighs, aching from the fresh weight of the evening’s frost. A man sat in his study watching exhausted leaves tremble and fall, spilling light with each pirouette. It was a morning not unlike any other for this man. He rose at seven, as was his custom.