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A Special Dad!

A Special Dad!

Cocoa Drops, this is a special man right here.

Good Morning America did an article on Samuel Forest of Armenia whose wife gave birth to his beautiful son, Leo, who has down syndrome.

In Armenia, if your child is born with a disability or anything it seems, you have the choice to give them up apparently. Who does that? Who? His wife, that’s who. She decided as soon as she was told by the pediatrician Leo had Down Syndrome that she wasn’t going to take him home. She literally gave Sam a life changing choice right then that if he kept the baby, she would divorce him. Wow, she deserves the G2H (go to hell) award of the century. She didn’t even give Sam the time to talk it over just between the two of them.

Since that day, Sam and Leo have been a dream team. Sam has a gofundme page set up to get enough money to work part-time and care for Leo too. Then he wants to go back to his home country of New Zealand where he has more family support. His page is called “Bring Leo Home”.

CDs let’s do what we can to help Sam and Leo. They deserve our love and support!

Donate today in the name of love and family!

http://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/woman-defends-husband-gave-newborn-syndrome/story?id=28798180

🙂 Phee
article and pic from a.abcnews.com

 
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Posted by on February 15, 2015 in Crazy Kids Stuff Sips

 

Absolutely

Absolutely
 
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Posted by on February 15, 2015 in Random Sips

 

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Everyday is the 14th

Oh my goodness.  This guy has written every word my husband has spoken all day long.

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While we were shopping at the grocery store, my husband was even more committed to his sentiment.  As he watched several men crowd the florist station and purchase bouquets and balloons, he began to tsk tsk down the aisle. But, the funny part is my toddler coerced him to buy a heart-shaped Frozen balloon just for her. Unbeknownst to him, he became one of those men. Lol. I agree that you should show love 365 days a year and I’m also not mad that there is 1 day set aside to show others love. Fellas, just be consistent and genuine 365. Your lady will definitely show you how much you are appreciated in return.

I hope everyone enjoyed their day with or without another person.

💖 KT

 
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Posted by on February 15, 2015 in Random Sips

 

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Morning Inspiration

Morning Inspiration

Reginald F. Lewis was born on December 7, 1942, in a Baltimore, Maryland, neighborhood he later described as “semi-tough.” Strongly influenced by his family, he began his career at the age of ten by delivering the local Afro-American newspaper. Fortune Magazine reported that “as a child, Lewis kept his earnings in a tin can known as ‘Reggie’s Hidden Treasure.’” The tin can had been given to him by his grandmother, who taught him the importance of saving some of everything he earned. Reginald later sold his newspaper business at a profit.
During his high school years at Dunbar, Reginald excelled in both his studies and sports. As quarterback of the football team, shortstop on the baseball team, and a forward on the basketball team, he served as captain for all three teams. Reginald was also elected vice-president of the student body; his friend and classmate, Robert M. Bell (current Chief Judge of Maryland), was elected president. In addition, Reginald worked nights and weekends at jobs with his grandfather, a head waiter and maitre’d.

In 1961, Reginald entered Virginia State University on a football scholarship, majoring in economics. He graduated on the Dean’s List despite having a rough first year academically as well as losing his scholarship due to an injury. After losing his scholarship, he worked in a bowling alley and as a photographer’s assistant to help pay his expenses. In his senior year, the Rockefeller Foundation funded a program at Harvard Law School to select a few black students to attend summer school at Harvard to introduce them to legal studies in general.
At the end of the program, Reginald was invited to attend Harvard Law School—the only person in the 148-year history of Harvard Law to be admitted before applying to the school. He arrived at Harvard with $50 in his pocket. During his third year at Harvard, he discovered the direction for his future career in a course on securities law. He wrote his third-year paper on takeovers. He graduated from Harvard Law School in 1968 and went to work for a prestigious New York law firm (Paul, Weiss.)

Within two years of graduation, Reginald established his own law firm, the first African American law firm on Wall Street. He focused on corporate law, and he also helped many minority-owned businesses secure badly needed capital using Minority Enterprise Small Business Investment Companies (venture capital firms formed by corporations or foundations, operating under the aegis of the Small Business Administration).  A desire to “do the deals myself” led him to establish the TLC Group L.P. in 1983. His first major deal involved the $22.5-million leveraged buyout of the McCall Pattern Company. Reginald nursed the struggling company back to health and, despite a declining market, led the company to enjoy the two most profitable years in its 113-year history. In the summer of 1987, he sold it for $90 million, making $50 million in profit.

In October 1987, Reginald purchased the international division of Beatrice Foods, with holdings in 31 countries, which became known as TLC Beatrice International. At $985 million, the deal was the largest leveraged buyout at the time of overseas assets by an American company. As Chairman and CEO, he moved quickly to reposition the company, pay down the debt, and vastly increase the company’s worth. By 1992, the company had sales of over $1.6 billion annually, and Reginald was sharing his time between his company’s offices in New York and an office in Paris (most of the company’s businesses were in Europe).

With all of his success, Reginald did not forget others; giving back was part of his life. In 1987 he established The Reginald F. Lewis Foundation, which funded grants of approximately $10 million to various non-profit programs and organizations while Reginald was alive. His first major grant was an unsolicited $1 million to Howard University—a school he never attended—in 1988; the federal government matched the grant, making the gift to Howard University $2 million, which was used to fund an endowment. Interest from this endowment is used for scholarships, fellowships, and faculty sabbaticals. In 1992, Reginald donated $3 million to Harvard Law School—the largest grant in the history of the school at the time. In gratitude, the school renamed its International Law Center the Reginald F. Lewis International Law Center. Among other programs, the grant supports a fellowship to teach minority lawyers how to be law professors. In January 1993, Reginald’s remarkable career was cut short by his untimely death at the age of 50 after a short illness. At his funeral, a letter from his longtime friend, David N. Dinkins, former mayor of New York, was read. In the letter, Dinkins wrote “Reginald Lewis accomplished more in half a century than most of us could ever deem imaginable. And his brilliant career was matched always by a warm and generous heart.” Dinkins added, “It is said that service to others is the rent we pay on earth. Reg Lewis departed us paid in full.”

Even after his death, Reginald’s philanthropic endeavors continue. During his illness, he made known his desire to support a museum of African American culture. In 2002, the Vice President of the foundation read an article in the Baltimore Sun describing a museum of Maryland African American History and Culture slated to be built near Baltimore’s Inner Harbor.
After further research and discussion, especially relative to the partnership between the museum and the Maryland State Department of Education to develop an African American curriculum to be taught in all public schools in the state of Maryland, the foundation made its largest grant to date to the proposed museum; $5 million dollars. The money is an endowment with the interest to be used for educational purposes.

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Reginaldflewis.com

Lawyer, entrepreneur, philanthropist, Chairman, CEO, husband, father, son, brother, nephew, cousin, friend—Reginald F. Lewis lived his life according to the words he often quoted to audiences around the country:
“Keep going, no matter what.”

 
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Posted by on February 15, 2015 in Inspirational Sips

 

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Yesssss

Yesssss
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Baisden Live on FB

 
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Posted by on February 14, 2015 in Random Sips

 

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Hilarious, but not true because we love you all!

Hilarious, but not true because we love you all!
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Glenda Beverly on FB

 
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Posted by on February 14, 2015 in Random Sips

 

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Morning Inspiration

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Charlotte Forten was the first northern African-American schoolteacher to go south to teach former slaves. A sensitive and genteel young woman, she brought intense idealism and fierce abolitionist zeal to her work. As a black woman, she hoped to find kinship with the freedmen, though her own education set her apart from the former slaves. She stayed on St. Helena Island for two years, then succumbed to ill health and had to return north. In 1864, she published “Life on the Sea Islands” in The Atlantic Monthly, which brought the work of the Port Royal Experiment to the attention of Northern readers.

Charlotte Forten was born in Philadelphia in 1837 into an influential and affluent family. Her grandfather had been an enormously successful businessman and significant voice in the abolitionist movement. The family moved in the same circles as William Lloyd Garrison and John Greenleaf Whittier: intellectual and political activity were part of the air Charlotte Forten breathed.

She attended Normal School in Salem, Massachusetts and began her teaching career in the Salem schools, the first African-American ever hired. But she longed to be part of a larger cause, and with the coming of the Civil War Forten found a way to act on her deepest beliefs. In 1862, she arrived on St. Helena Island, South Carolina, where she worked with Laura Towne. As she began teaching, she found that many of her pupils spoke only Gullah and were unfamiliar with the routines of school. Though she yearned to feel a bond with the islanders, her temperament, upbringing and education set her apart, and she found she had more in common with the white abolitionists there. Under physical and emotional stress, Forten, who was always frail, grew ill and left St. Helena after two years.

Today, Forten is best remembered for her diaries. From 1854-64 and 1885-92, she recorded the life of an intelligent, cultured, romantic woman who read and wrote poetry, attended lectures, worked, and took part in the largest social movement of her time. She was determined to embody the intellectual potential of all black people. She set a course of philosophical exploration, social sophistication, cultural achievement and spiritual improvement. She was, above all, dedicated to social justice.

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Voices.cla.umn.edu

In her later life, she lived in Washington D.C. and continued to support equal rights for African-Americans. She married the minister Francis Grimke, nephew of the crusading Grimke sisters. After many years as an invalid, she died in 1914, having been a voice for equality throughout her life.

In Her Own Words

“Monday, October 23, 1854: I will spare no effort to prepare myself well for the responsible duties of a teacher, and to live for the good I can do my oppressed and suffering fellow creatures.” — Diary entry

“Sunday, January 18, 1856: But oh, how inexpressibly bitter and agonizing it is to feel oneself an outcast from the rest of mankind, as we are in this country! To me it is dreadful, dreadful. Oh, that I could de much towards bettering our condition. I will do all, all the very little that lies in my power, while life and strength last!” — Diary entry

“Wednesday, November 5, 1862: Had my first regular teaching experience, and to you and you only friend beloved, will I acknowledge that it was not a very pleasant one.” — Diary entry

“Thursday, November 13, 1862: Talked to the children a little while to-day about the noble Toussaint [L’Ouverture]. They listened very attentively. It is well that they should know what one of their own color could do for his race. I long to inspire them with courage and ambition (of a noble sort), and high purpose.” — Diary entry

“The first day of school was rather trying. Most of my children are very small, and consequently restless. But after some days of positive, though not severe, treatment, order was brought out of chaos. I never before saw children so eager to learn.” — Life on the Sea Islands

“The long, dark night of the Past, with all its sorrows and its fears, was forgotten; and for the Future — the eyes of these freed children see no clouds in it. It is full of sunlight, they think, and they trust in it, perfectly.” — Life on the Sea Islands

“I shall dwell again among ‘mine own people.'” I shall gather my scholars about me, and see smiles of greeting break over their dusky faces. My heart sings a song of thanksgiving, at the thought that even I am permitted to do something for a long-abused race, and aid in promoting a higher, holier, and happier life on the Sea Islands.” — Life on the Sea Islands

 
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Posted by on February 14, 2015 in Inspirational Sips

 

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Target Teen Gets The Job

Target Teen Gets The Job

I love a feel good story where people come together to help each other and just be nice to one another.

Well, that’s what happened to a young kid at Target last week or the week before.  He is a fifteen year old kid with an interview for his first job.  He went to Target to find a clip-on tie but they only carry regular ties.  One of the male sales associates, with 2 other associates, got the tie and helped him tie it.  All the while a customer, taken aback at their kindness, was videotaping the event.  Her video went viral and it was even picked up on the local and then national news.

It’s a grainy video (pic below) but you get the jist of what’s going on once you read the article.  If you just see the video you may not what’s going on.  LOL

All 3 sales associates talked to the teen and gave him advice on what he should do and helped him practice his handshake even.

After I saw the expose I wanted to know if he got the job and he did!  He interviewed with Chick-fil-a in a mall and they actually debuted him getting the job on tv due to all the buzz around him in Target that day.

I instantly started smiling from ear to ear and then let out my usual, Awwwwww because this is awesome.  Humans helping each regardless of race or age.  Kids these days don’t listen to us older people for real but he did.

Congrats Yasir Moore on your new job, we wish you the best in your future!

target-yasir-moore-copy

http://6abc.com/society/teen-in-viral-picture-at-raleigh-target-store-gets-the-job/516224/

😊Phee

Pics from abcnews.go.com and nydailynews.com.

Article from abcnews.com.

 
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Posted by on February 13, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

Love Me Some Leah Still

Love Me Some Leah Still

I love Leah Still and her dad Devon Still.  I found out about Devon’s story during football season when he was put back on the practice squad for the Cincinnati Bengals to help him pay for her medical expenses.

See Leah has stage 4 cancer (neuroblastoma) and she is only 4 years old!  It breaks my heart but when I see her cuterful little face I cannot help but to be happy.  I’ve been praying for her swift recovery ever since I found out about her.

Nike invited her to walk in their fashion show and she did her thing! She got to go to the Today Show also.  Devon says that Leah started a new treatment last week for her cancer and it went well.  I pray that it eliminates the cancer completely!

Keep Leah and Devon in your thoughts and prayers!

Nike Levi's Kids - Backstage - Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Fall 2015

http://m.today.com/style/devon-stills-daughter-leah-shines-runway-new-york-fashion-week-2D80489045

😍Phee

Pics from cincyjungle.com and globalgrind.com.

Article from Today.com.

 
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Posted by on February 13, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

Things You Don’t Say To Your Partner

Things You Don’t Say To Your Partner

I’m a serial monogamist and I’m always looking for things I can do better in my relationships.

This article made me realize I have a lot more work to do with my words.  I started off holding everything in and then 8 years ago I ran into a partner that made me open my mouth in defense and I haven’t stopped talking since.

I think all of us have said one of the following…

You always….

Whatever

It’s not my fault

I’m sorry but…

Calm down

According to Rachel Grumman Berman, these are some of the 7 things you should not say in a relationship.

She says with these words you put your partner in defense mode automatically.  I understand that.  When I say whatever, it makes people so mad (hee hee) because I have checked out at this point.

Communication is soooo important and maybe this can help you in your relationship along with me in mine.  If you care that is!  Ahhhhh, I was deep just then.  LO

https://www.yahoo.com/health/7-things-you-should-never-ever-say-to-your-110819628422.html

😛Phee

Pic courtesy of Warren Goldswain/Stocksy off Yahoo.

 
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Posted by on February 13, 2015 in Uncategorized