All Aboard! And, don’t forget to bring your dreams!
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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Positive Thoughts | Positive Actions | Positive Results
by Rose Caplan
All Aboard! And, don’t forget to bring your dreams!
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
visit with us on follow us on
by Rose Caplan
Sometimes it is those few good moments that we find in challenging days for which we are the most thankful. ~The Feed Your Good Dog Council
FIND THE GOOD IN EACH DAY
Every day can’t be a good day.
But within each day—those
long twenty-four hours—there
are a few minutes or even
seconds when something good
or special happens.
Those moments are as powerful
as the frail flame of a candle
that can light an entire dark room.
—Judith Garrett Garrison and Scott Sheperd
Read more at Source: belief.net
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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by Rose Caplan
Y’ALL PUT SOME HEE HAW BACK IN YOUR HOLIDAYS!
This is the last weekend for Center Stage North’s production of A Country Christmas Carol!
Seasons greetings from Marley County, U.S.A., where folks don’t have a whole lot, but where everybody’s doing what they can to make the Christmas holiday crackle. Except for one mean and miserly old coot who somehow misses the whole point. Ring a bell? It’s Dickens’ classic, dusted off and gussied up in a new country-western musical version. A Country Christmas Carol is ideal family holiday fare—fresh, engaging, often hilarious, and genuinely moving. It’s a timeless tale of redemption and reunion, community and family, the kind of story that was made for country music. The score would make Patsy Cline proud, with show stopping ballads to snappy two-steps, sung by a feisty bunch who deal head-on with life’s joys and heartaches. All the characters are here—with some nifty variations: Banker Scrooge, the man with the worst case of Christmas blues ever; his secretary Bobbie Jo Cratchit, a young widow with two small children, Jane and Tim; his lovable ne’er-do-well nephew Dwight; Lavinia, a good-ol’-girl with big hair and an even bigger heart; plus some decidedly Country Christmas spirits. This is a down-home pleasure from start to finish. Source: Dramatic Publishing
A Country Christmas Carol is a musical based on a book by Ron Kaehler; music by Albert Evans; and, lyrics by Albert Evans and Ron Kaehler. The production is directed by Sarah Mitchell.
Performances are this Friday, Saturday and Sunday, December 17, 18 and 19.
Performance times are Friday at 8pm; Saturday at 2pm and 8pm and Sunday at 2pm. Tickets are $12 for all performances except Saturday’s 2pm performance. Tickets for the Saturday afternoon performance are $10 and benefit 11Q Research and Resource Group.
Reserve tickets at Center Stage North or by calling (770) 516-3330.
Performances are held at The Art Place Mountainview, 3330 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta, GA 30066.
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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by Rose Caplan
INTROSPECTION AND POSITIVE ACTIONS L.E.A.D. ATLANTA
in•tro•spec•tion
noun ˌin-trə-ˈspek-shən
: a reflective looking inward : an examination of one’s own thoughts and feelings
This post is about an amazing non profit organization – L.E.A.D. (Launch, Expose, Advise, Direct). In order to understand its depth and the impact on us all you need insight into its founders and the thought process behind its creation. It is impossible to separate the two.
L.E.A.D. is a culmination of life lessons learned by founders CJ and Kelli Stewart. L.E.A.D. came to be because CJ and Kelli chose to take positive action on their life experiences and share their lessons in an effort to serve others.
Moreover, the thought processes developed from CJ Stewart’s ability to be introspective and honest with himself is the impetus for L.E.A.D. He was able to create, and is able to sustain, an organization such as L.E.A.D due in part to his ability to deeply and honestly reflect on where he’s been, what he’s learned, knowing who he is and what he wants to achieve.
CJ grew up in Atlanta’s inner city and if not for community support he would not have realized his dream of playing for the Chicago Cubs. He was first drafted by the Cubs right out of high school but his parents encouraged him to attend Georgia State University because they felt he needed the time to mature. The Cubs drafted CJ a second time after college. He had matured but lacked the mentorship needed to understand what it meant to be part of a professional organization like the Cubs. He didn’t appreciate all of the resources made available to him by the Cubs and wasn’t prepared to take advantage of what they had to offer. CJ’s pro career may have been longer and much more successful if he had.
After the Cubs, CJ took his professional baseball experiences and started a business helping young men realize their goals of having successful careers as student/athletes in college and at the professional level. His thriving business, Diamond Directors, helps paying clients reach their college and career goals in baseball. He came to realize, however, that there was an underserved group of athletic young men in the inner city. They were kept from achieving the same success as those paying clients because they lacked the finances for professional instruction, strength training, travel teams, showcases, etc. So based on this realization, he set out to change that and L.E.A.D. was born.
L.E.A.D. is a means to an end. Through L.E.A.D., young men from the inner city, have an opportunity, when they may not otherwise, to earn an education and commit to improving themselves and their communities. They learn the discipline and commitment to improve by developing their raw athletic talent in baseball through L.E.A.D.
The acronym L.E.A.D. stands for Launch. Expose. Advise. Direct. L.E.A.D. works to:
Launch educational opportunities by converting the raw baseball talent of inner city middle and high school males to skills that are attractive to college coaches for scholarships.
Expose its L.E.A.D.ers to service and local enrichment activities in order to instill a sense of responsibility, belonging and investment; key requirements for building a civically engaged individual.
Advise players, coaches and parents on the process of effectively supporting dreams of playing baseball on the college level.
Direct young men toward their promise by using the historical journey of past African American legends in baseball and the community as the roadmap. Once they have a connection to the game, they can begin to appreciate the contributions made by all the people who have and are baseball and communities great.
To date 83% of L.E.A.D.’s Ambassador graduates have earned college baseball scholarships and 100% of them have gone to college, evidence that L.E.A.D. is successful in accomplishing what it sets out to do….taking the dreams of families in the inner city and making those dreams of graduating from high school and going to college a reality through baseball.
L.E.A.D. runs off of donations of time and money. You will reap the benefits ultimately from either. Find out how you can help here.
Sources: CJ and Kelli Stewart and “Taking the L.E.A.D.” interview in Oct/Nov/Dec i[x] magazine.
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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by Rose Caplan
Growing up without material possessions is one thing, but growing up without dreams in unacceptable.” ~ CJ Stewart, founder L.E.A.D. Legacy League
L.E.A.D. takes the dreams of families in the inner city and makes them a reality using baseball; dreams such as graduating from high school and going to college.
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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by Rose Caplan
This Sunday, December 12, 7pm local time, light a candle and help ensure that the light of a beloved child may always shine.
If there is to be any comfort at all as we endure the loss of a child, it would be that they are never, ever, forgotten. ~ Rosemarie Maki, in loving memory of Thomas
This Sunday, December 12 is National Children’s Memorial Day and Worldwide Candle Lighting.
Please light a candle to remember all children who have died. Candles are lit at 7 pm local time around the world. This is believed to be the largest mass candle lighting in the world, and it creates a virtual 24-hour wave of light as it moves from time zone to time zone. Hundreds of formal candle lighting events are held and thousands of informal candle lightings are conducted in homes as families gather in quiet remembrance of children who have died, but will never be forgotten.
For more information including the location of services both in the U.S. and around the world, visit The Compassionate Friends or call 877-969-0010.
And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!
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