
Probably the last person you'd expect to cite Sarah Palin favorably is Noam Chomsky. Yet in an interview with the Leftist news organization Democracy Now, Chomsky did precisely that, saying Palin was right to mock Obama for his lack of substance.
"I don't usually admire Sarah Palin," Chomsky said, "but when she was making fun of this 'hopey changey stuff,' she was right, there was nothing there."
Watch Chomsky's surprisingly honest admission below:
(H/T: National Review)
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I really don't think this is going to go over well.
For those of you too young to remember, the reference is to the popular saying during the Clinton era that he (Clinton) was our first black president.
Because the Left always makes perfect sense. . . .
Also, obviously Time's cover last week sexualizing breastfeeding must have driven Newsweek into a competitive frenzy.
Your thoughts?
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Gallup released their annual state-by-state presidential approval numbers yesterday, and the results should have 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue very worried. If President Obama carries only those states where he had a net positive approval rating in 2011 (e.g. Michigan where he is up 48 percent to 44 percent), Obama would lose the 2012 election to the Republican nominee 323 electoral votes to 215.
Read more at Beltway 'Confidential
To see the artists and titles - or to pause - run your mouse over the bottom of album to bring up the controls. To see the pictures in album format, click below:
This is a gift that keeps on growing - feel free to send me pictures to add (I am not using Madonna pictures in this one - saving that for later)
It is also one that can keep on giving - please pass it on - you can use the Share buttons above or send a link to MommyLife!
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If you have the time, spend a minute at the end to see what each flower means. Very cool.
- Mother's DayYou can subscribe to American Minute - a concise daily dose of American history - at American Minute.com]]>Mothers' Day was held in Boston in 1872 at the suggestion of Julia Ward Howe, writer of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
But it was Anna Jarvis, daughter of a Methodist minister in Grafton, West Virginia, who made it a national event.
During the Civil War, Anna Jarvis' mother organized Mothers' Day Work Clubs to care for wounded soldiers, both Union and Confederate.
She raised money for medicine, inspected bottled milk, improved sanitation and hired women to care for families where mothers suffered from tuberculosis.
In her mother's honor, Anna Jarvis persuaded her church to set aside the 2nd Sunday in May, the anniversary of her mother's death, as a day to appreciate all mothers.
Encouraged by the reception, Anna Jarvis organized it in Philadelphia, then began a letter-writing campaign to ministers, businessmen and politicians to establish a national Mothers' Day.
In response, on MAY 9, 1914, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the first National Mothers' Day as a
"public expression of...love and reverence for the mothers of our country."
President Reagan said in his Mother's Day Proclamation, 1986:
"A Jewish saying sums it up: 'God could not be everywhere - so He created mothers.'"
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From Wendy K:
HAVING MOM OVER FOR DINNER]]>You don't even have to be a mother to enjoy this one ...
Brian invited his mother over for dinner. During the course of the meal, Brian's mother couldn't help but notice how beautiful Brian's roommate, Jennifer, was. Brian's Mom had long been suspicious of the platonic relationship between Brian and Jennifer, and this had only made her more curious.
Over the course of the evening, while watching the two interact, she started to wonder if there was more between Brian and Jennifer than met the eye.
Reading his mom's thoughts, Brian volunteered, 'I know what you must be thinking, but I assure you Jennifer and I are just roommates.'
About a week later, Jennifer came to Brian saying, 'Ever since your mother came to dinner, I've been unable to find the beautiful silver gravy ladle. You don't suppose she took it, do you?'
Brian said, 'Well, I doubt it, but I'll send her an e-mail just to be sure. So he sat down and wrote:
Dear Mom,I'm not saying that you 'did' take the gravy ladle from the house, I'm not saying that you 'did not' take the gravy ladle. But the fact remains that one has been missing ever since you were here for dinner.
Love,
BrianSeveral days later, Brian received an email back from his mother that read:
Dear Son,
I'm not saying that you 'do' sleep with Jennifer, I'm not saying that you 'do not' sleep with Jennifer. But the fact remains that if Jennifer is sleeping in her own bed, she would have found the gravy ladle by now.
Love,
MomLESSON OF THE DAY ...
NEVER LIE TO YOUR MOTHER.

Lord, Help Me to Build a Healthy ChildBy: Audrey Jeanne Roberts
For it is easier to build a child then to repair an adult.
Help me praise more than criticize, encourage more than nag.
Discipline, not punish, and model good behavior,
Rather than simply demand it.Help me break the habit of automatically saying "No",
when I could just as easily say "Yes",
and to remember a hug given before it's asked for is ten times more valuable!Help me earn their respect as I lead a life consistent
with the principles I value.
Lord, give me the courage to teach them right from wrong
and help them discover their own special destinies.Help me to freely join in their silliness, share in their laughter,
delight in their joys and keep their confidences.
Remind me daily to draw upon their own strength to heal their
wounds and comfort their sorrows.Most of all, Lord, help me really listen for the hidden thoughts and needs
that often lie behind their requests and give me the key to their heart that
it may be opened wide to all life's wonders and possibilities.
HT: Susan Moorman
Art notes: Walter Beach Humphrey, Mother and Child 1930
From Lord. Please Help Me Build a Healthy Child
I want to share something I wrote six years ago I remembered today because so many here and at Facebook responded to the "Forgive Yourself" advice from the Reflections of Motherhood video.
I want to remind you that I am not one to encourage people to go easy on themselves. I think we should work hard and make the most of the gifts God has given us. But as the Bible tells us "All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God." We are not perfect. We will make mistakes. And this is especially difficult in parenthood because most of us have spent years blaming our parents for the mistakes they made. It's easy to be overcome by fear that our children will likewise blame us.
And no matter how hard you try, some of them will. I can tell you this because I'm on the other side of motherhood - well, I'm still on both sides, but the majority of my kids are adults and each one has a unique perception, a unique relationship (or in one case, lack of relationship) with me. I have been accused of things I don't remember saying and which don't sound like me at all. I've been reminded of decisions I made when I didn't have as much wisdom as I have now. Some of my kids are more forgiving than others. Some more grateful than others.
With 11 of my 12 children, undergirding all is a love that is compelling, strong, sweet and true. From the separation imposed by one sister, the others have seen firsthand that the possibilities of forgiveness are severely crippled when you cut off relationship, that we are all works in progress and that when you freeze someone at one moment in time, you take God out of the equation.
Because self-awareness and self-honesty were priorities in our family, no one got off the hook after a mistake without a thorough deconstruction to see what lessons could be learned. I have seen as my children make mistakes and look at themselves with courage and humility, they grow in wisdom. As they grow in wisdom, they look at their parents' mistakes and growing wisdom with more respect.
I can't speak for parents who are dangerous and harmful. My father - who had left my mother, brothers and me when I was 5 and had only a very few scattered contacts with me over the course of the next 50 years - contacted me a few years ago to reestablish relationship, which I was happy to do. However, when I learned he was a convicted pedophile and questioned him about it, his reaction was so bizarre that I honestly felt there was no hope in my continuing the relationship, though I continue to pray for him. (If you have time for a soap opera, you can read about it at Family Skeletons - Breaking Free).
So I really don't know what to say when other moms tell me how terrible their moms are - how hurtful and mean and cruel. My daughter Jasmine would probably say the same thing about me because she reacts differently to me than her siblings - just as I stopped loving my mom while my brothers continued.
I really don't have all the answers. In fact as I grow older, I have more questions. My purpose in bringing this up as we approach Mother's Day is to get us thinking and praying about whether God might want us to do things differently.
And let me just take a moment to mention how important it's been to me when my friends have shared their relationships with their parents with me - how much I appreciate the good solid ones I've seen, as well as the ones where I see my friend bite her tongue and choose to love her parents despite rude and hateful remarks. All of you have been an example to me.
And now - sorry for the L-O-N-G introduction - for the reason I started writing this in the first place, a reprint from January 2006:
I use time in doctors' offices to read magazines I wouldn't ever see. So, yes, I know all about Britney and Don and Jessica and Nick and Paris and her animal collection. I mean, between all my kids I DO spend a lot of time in doctors' offices!]]>But last week I picked up an issue of Vogue - which you don't often find in doctors' offices and which I used to read religiously back in my more glamorous days - and came across something so interesting I grabbed my notebook from my purse (if you write, you must make sure you always have a notebook!) and jotted down some notes to share with you. Good thing, too, because the article that got my attention is not online.
It was a piece called "Father's Day" by Tamasin Day-Lewis. If you recognize that name, it's because, yes, she is the sister of Daniel Day-Lewis, the amazing actor from My Left Foot and Last of the Mohicans - both I consider must-see films, if you can handle a lot of bad language by a quadriplegic in the first and a lot of violence by Indians in the second.
I had never heard of Tamasin, but she is a journalist and both she and Daniel are children of Cecil Day-Lewis, a British poet-laureate who died in 1972. What caught my eye was this piece of his poetry which was published posthumously:
Children Leaving HomeForgive my coldness, now past recall,
Angers, injustice, moods contrary, mean or blind;
And best, my dears, forgive
Yourselves, when I am gone, for all
Love signals you ignored and for the fugitive
Openings you never took into my mind.Whew. I know a lot of moms reading this are way too young for this to resonate - unless it resonates in regard to your own parents. This is a whole different phase of motherhood - although I'm still happily mired in the younger years with six kids 5-16. For all the writing available about bringing up younger kids, I just don't know that there's much about watching kids leave home.
I had an email this morning from an old friend in California who dropped off her youngest son at a New York college this weekend. She was probably the most supportive sports mom I know - at every football game for years and years (and for 20 years she's run the Pregnancy Resource Center in her town, saving hundreds of babies from abortion). Her son won a football scholarship which will see him through school. She's proud, but she confessed she still hasn't stopped crying. Even when they leave in the best of circumstances, there is so much sadness. Of course this is what you prepared them for - to be independent - but is it even possible to be prepared ourselves?
I can look at my children and see something like a slideshow of how they've looked over the years. Hear their little voices singing hymns with me each morning. Do you know what I mean? I wonder what each of them sees when they look at me, for each has his or her own set of memories about me and each feels and responds differently to who I am. That's a mystery I cannot solve.
And so what struck me wasn't just her father's poem, but Tamasin's comments:
"One stanza particularly stands out and has always made my brother angry sensing that our father was putting us at fault and blaming us for not getting to know him properly."I don't read it like that; I see it more as a valedictory, a blessing, an understanding of the places a child's mind cannot reach but shouldn't feel guilty about. It stands with the photograph [on which the article is based] as the way I wish to remember the most influential man in my life, my father."
Even if we've been terrific parents, some of our children may grow up to misunderstand and misjudge us. They may spend the rest of their lives denying our influence, but we will see it anyway and know God sees it too. Parenthood is really a matter between you and God anyway, because it is part of our stewardship. Our children are not our children, but God's children given to us for a brief span to prepare them for the rest of their lives.
Will we make mistakes? Of course we will. Think how young and inexperienced we were when we started! God doesn't call the equipped - he equips those he calls. And just like the all-too-human characters in the Bible, we will live lives filled with the good, the bad, and the ugly. The important thing is to be like David - humble and teachable and quick to repent - rather than like Saul. To not expect perfection from ourselves - because only God is perfect - but to lean on him to reveal how we can become more like him each day.
Parenting isn't just about us helping our kids reach their potential - it's about God helping us reach ours. All of God's children have free will - even those with whom he walked in the Garden of Eden. God will not judge us by results - how our kids turn out or how they feel about us.
"The Lord does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart." (1 Samuel 16:7)I don't know about you, but I find that very reassuring!
Did you like this? What meant the most to you?
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So, is this adorable or what? Sophia made it for me for Mother's Day 2009 - rummaging through a box of old stickers we've had since she was a toddler.
Lots of inside jokes - I can't believe she managed to find something to characterize each of my children.
My oldest daughter Samantha is carrying a picnic basket because when she brings her family over on Sunday - with my six grandchildren - she always brings food to add to whatever I'm making.
My oldest son Josh is a contractor.
Matt is an actor and a waiter.
Ben is an opera singer and looks good dressed up - notice all the musical kids have notes hovering about.
Zach is a computer geek.
Sophia loves to cook.
Jonny is a goofball who loves to be a big brother to Justin (the youngest) They're playing ball with their Dad, who when things are well coaches their Challenger team
Maddy loves watermelon and singing.
Jesse likes to load things into his dump truck and push it around the yard.
Daniel loves tractors and cowboys.
And I'm taking pictures of it all.
What a labor of love!
Inside she wrote:
Her children arise and call her blessed. Proverbs 31:28.
This kind of Mother's Day gift costs nothing but is priceless!
]]>7 Prayers that Will Change Your Life Forever. It's one of those very pretty gift books with short chapters. But Stormie has made every word count. There's no fluff here - just good solid advice to revolutionize your Christian walk.
I was especially struck with Chapter Three - The Prayer of Release. I'm going to excerpt some bits here, because I think it will resonate with some of you. If it does, you may want to read the whole book.
Stormie begins with a mercifully brief account - less than 150 words - summarizing her mother's sins against her. It's brief because it's not where Stormie chooses to dwell. She wants to share her healing:
Many years later I sat in front of Mary Anne, a Christian counselor, who told me I needed to forgive my mother if I wanted to find complete wholeness and healing. Forgive someone who treated me with hatred and abuse? Someone who has ruined my life by making me into an emotional cripple? How can I? I thought to myself, overwhelmed at the prospect of so great a task. I had already confessed my sins, and now my counselor was asking me to forgive my mother - all in the same counseling session."You don't need to feel forgiveness in order to say you forgive someone," Mary Anne explained. "Forgiveness is something you do out of obedience to the Lord because he has forgiven you. You have to be willing to say, 'God, I confess hatred for my mother, and I ask your forgiveness. . . .
As Stormie, in obedience, prayed for God's forgiveness for her own sin of not forgiving, then prayed "God, forgive my mother," she says she felt God's love as never before.
It was the beginning of a process - especially since Stormie's mother's abuse continued and increased toward her.
For Stormie, the turning point came when she prayed, "Lord, help me have a heart like yours for my mother," and in accepting God's answer to that prayer,
I could see how her life, like mine, had been twisted and deformed by circumstances beyond her control. Suddenly I no longer felt hated her for it. I felt sorry for her instead.Being in touch with the heart of God for my mother brought such forgiveness in me that when she died a few years later, I had absolutely no bad feelings toward her. In fact, the more I forgave her, the more the Lord brought to mind good memories. I was amazed there were any at all.
Forgiveness leads to life. Unforgiveness is a slow death. Forgiveness is ongoing because once you've dealt with the past, constant infractions occur in the present. None of us get by without having our pride wounded or being manipulated, offended or hurt by someone. Each time that happens it leaves a scar on the soul if not confessed, released, and dealt with before the Lord. Besides that, unforgiveness separates you from people you love.
Though a lack of forgiveness does not change our status as born-again believers, Stormie explains why a broken relationship with an earthly parent limits our relationship with God and with our own children.
And I like the way she urges us to take responsibility:
Forgiveness is a two-way street. God forgives you and you forgive others. God forgives you quickly and completely upon your confession of wrongdoing. You are to forgive others quickly and completely, whether they admit failure or not. . .Forgiveness is a choice we make. We base our decision not on what we feel like doing but what we know is right. I did not like forgiving my mother. Instead, I chose to forgive her because God's Word says, "Forgive, and you will be forgiven." (Luke 6:37)
There are both spiritual and psychological reasons to forgive. The spiritual reason is that we desire to obey God. . .
The psychological reason is to free ourselves. . . .When we forgive, we make a choice to no longer allow other people's sin to dictate how we feel or what we do. Forgiveness gives us the freedom to truly live our lives as God intended.
It was hard for me to understand that God loves my mother as much as he loves me. He loves all people as much as he loves me. The most important thing to remember is that forgiveness doesn't make the other person right, it makes you free.
I will be writing more over the next couple days on this theme: the freedom in forgiveness. In the meantime, if this is the next place in your spiritual journey, Godspeed!