Wishing you a splendid Thanksgiving.

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friends matter most.’

Friend Jim Osterman writes in the AJC about what truly matters most on the day when we sit down this week to give thanks. He graciously allowed us to share his column with you here.


“…Happily, most of us have much to be thankful for. We wake in a soft bed with clean sheets and under a roof in a home with electricity, running water and a thermostat. Our kitchens have more than enough food; we have clean clothes to wear and at least one dependable car. We have cell phones and computers and money in the bank. And that’s all in the plus column before our feet hit the floor every morning.”  Read more…

For more from Jim, check out JimboKnows.com. 

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“Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul.”

                                                      –John Muir

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Today’s Blog Post


I GOT NUTHIN’.


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On Watermelons As A Metaphor For Life
“I know how a prize watermelon looks when it is sunning its fat rotundity among pumpkin vines and ‘simblins;’ I know how to tell when its ripe without ‘plugging’ it; I know how inviting it looks when its cooling itself in a tub of water under the bed, waiting; I know how it looks when it lies on the table in the sheltered great floor-space between house and kitchen, and the children gathered for the sacrifice and their mouths watering; I know the crackling sound it makes when the carving knife enters its end, and I can see the split fly along in front of the blade as the knife cleaves its way to the other end; I can see the halves fall apart and display the rich red meat and the black seeds, and the heart standing up, a luxury fit for the elect; I know how a boy looks, behind a yard long slice of that melon, and I know how he feels for I have been there. I know the watermelon which has been honestly come by and I know the taste of the watermelon which has been acquired by art. Both taste good, but the experienced know which tastes best.” (NPR)

Autobiography of Mark Twain, Vol. 1By Mark Twain
Edited by Harriet E. Smith
Hardcover, 760 pages
University of California Press

Available on Amazon

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