Some Sanity in the World of Sports

The Huffington Post by Ryan Grenoble              Posted:

Sports broadcasts are typically known for their punchy lists of best plays, epic goal countdowns and testosterone-fueled commentary.

Which makes Dale Hansen’s address Monday night all the more remarkable. The Dallas sports anchor for ABC local affiliate WFAA took a break from the standard script to address the issue of Michael Sam, a defensive lineman poised to become the first openly gay player in the NFL.

The approximately two-minute segment, titled “Hansen Unplugged: Celebrating Our Differences,” opens with a joke about Sam’s “shocking” circumstance — that he’s the “best defensive player in football’s best conference,” yet only a third to fifth-round NFL pick (“Really?!?”) — before adopting a more serious tone and addressing Sam’s critics and haters alike.

In particular, Hansen focuses on athletes who are deeply destructive to the world and people around them, yet are still revered for their on-field performance:

You beat a woman and drag her down a flight of stairs, pulling her hair out by the roots? You’re the fourth guy taken in the NFL draft. You kill people while driving drunk? That guy’s welcome. Players caught in hotel rooms with illegal drugs and prostitutes? We know they’re welcome. Players accused of rape and pay the woman to go away? You lie to police, trying to cover up a murder? We’re comfortable with that.

Hansen then drives home the hypocrisy: “You love another man? Well, now you’ve gone too far!”

“I’m not always comfortable when a man tells me he’s gay; I don’t understand his world,” Hansen adds later. “But I do understand that he’s part of mine.”

The segment made waves on social media — from the jocular (“BREAKING: Texas has sane people too“) to the more sentimental (“Proof there is still hope for humanity“).

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The Creative Force is Limitless

If the previous post regarding the postulation that Creation is not logical, seems to be a an incorrect statement consider the following explanation of Creativity.

Logic sees limits

Reason sees possibility

Possibility without limits is Creativity

Creativity and logic cannot co-exist

Creativity gives life

Life is possibility animated by the desire to experience its own limitlessness (ALIVENESS).

Logic looks at what is and says, “This is”.

Reason looks at what is and says, “There could be more”.

Creativity looks at what could be and moves toward it, ever expanding.

Expansion is limitless.

There is NO END to the CREATIVE FORCE!

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The Relationship of Man to God and Creation

 

The following is a most interesting treatise postulating the relationship of man to God and Creation.

God is the Creator

Creativity is of God

Creativity is not logical

Logic is man’s ego invention

Man can create

Man is God’s “son” (Creation)

Man and God are One in Creation

Creation is unlimited

God is unlimited

Man’s limit is himself

Ego is man’s limitation

Logic is reason distorted by ego

Creativity results in reason

Reason results in Truth

Creativity is Truth

Truth is God

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How Can We Recognize Truth?

To recognized and understand truth consider this. When the Spirit hears Truth and rejoices in it, the result is that indefinable peace. While there is a willingness to share, there is no need to convert others, nor to persuade or convince. There is no tension or requirement to bring others to your understanding. No need for words and protestations. For, within that peace comes understanding that Truth cannot be forced upon others. It must be sought out of one’s accord. There is the understanding that those for whom you could light the way… Will Find YOU and you need not go in search of anything for you have everything already.

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The Things of Spirit

Brain Energy2

How can you discern what is true from what is false? How can you know that the information you receive from some unknown place is not of your own making?  How can you feel confident that what you have received is indeed of spirit and not some delusion of the mind?

You can know by first knowing that the things of Spirit never cause you fear or pain.  They never create tension or guilt. They do not separate you from others or from the whole in any way. They never condemn another or create thoughts that lead to divisiveness. They do not render you powerless. They are never diminished in the giving and can therefore be offered freely and generously.  It is in the giving that the things of the spirit are increased.

Spirit is ever loving.  Ever giving.  Ever accepting.  Ever understanding. Ever aware that what appears to require any form of forgiveness is only an illusion; a momentary condition which always passes. Spirit is wholly loving, wholly accepting of life as it unfolds. It operates wholly within the realm of grace. Spirit sees only the perfection of itself and sees only itself in all things. It is, therefore, ever aware of your perfection even while seeing the imperfect things you do. Spirit observes the dance of life, with all its missteps, placidly and without judgment for it knows that life is unfolding just as it must. It knows that life is the highest expression of the universe; the one song, and all of nature is learning to dance.

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Do Opposites Really Attract?

Family walking in poppy field holding hands smilingScience tells us that opposites attract. This is true energetically and often true of relationships, but as in science, the principle only applies to the energy we bring to the relationship, and that energy needs to be balanced for harmony to exist.  Whether we are looking at electricity or human relationships, too much of anything really isn’t good.

Energetically, some of us are extroverts and some introverts. Some like to talk and some like to listen. Some are bold and some are cautious. Some are serious and some are playful. When an extroverted talker pairs up with an introverted listener, for example, it can be a match made in heaven if the amount of talking one partner does is balanced with the amount of listening the other is willing to give.  If the talker talks more than the listener can tolerate, or if the listener doesn’t talk enough, there will be trouble in paradise.

There is another principle in nature where just the opposite is true, one that applies to physical properties and to relationships as well. In this instance, opposites actually repel. Humans, being complex physical beings, as well as energetic ones, are subject to this second principle too. Examples of this principle can be found in substances such as oil and water. Everyone knows oil and water don’t mix. Neither do a lot of the beliefs, values, attitudes and opinions people hold.

Where opposites may attract energetically, on a substantial level, likeness is what attracts. Just as water soluble substances mix readily with water and oil soluble substances with oil, the beliefs, values, attitudes and opinions people hold must be similar for the relationship to be compatible.

Have you ever heard someone refer to an incompatible couple as “polar opposites?” More often than not, what makes a couple “polar opposites” is their  beliefs, values, attitudes and/or opinions, not their energetic makeup unless one is too extreme.

It is not uncommon to see bold types, who want to lead, paired with reserved types, who are happy to follow. Where the friction comes in for these couples is not in the way they approach life energetically, but in the way they think about life.

Energetically, opposite poles are attracted to one another because they are two halves of a whole. Energy must have an active (positive) charge and a receptive (negative) charge to express. A well-balanced relationship is like two sides of a coin. The two may look and express differently, but they feel they are part of the same unit; the two together feel whole.

At a human level, complete opposites never bond. Bonding can only occur when two of like mind unite; when they are attuned to one another and energetically balanced and when when they share similar beliefs, values, attitudes and opinions. When relationships are not working, the first place to explore and work on is beliefs, values, attitudes and opinions.

Many people in troubled relationships focus on the energetic aspects of their relationship – “He’s too predictable and boring.”  “She’s too unpredictable and excitable.”  These energetic differences can actually complement one another if beliefs, values, attitudes and opinions are aligned.  The one who seeks excitement and novelty can lead the staid one into fun situations he or she may never have experienced, for example. The staid one can help keep the excitable one more grounded and focused. When energetic difference are appreciated, they tend to find the perfect balance on their own.

Healthy beliefs? No one is all right or all wrong. Everyone is lovable if we are looking at the right aspects of them, and everyone is worthy of love and consideration. (Consideration and respect are not the same thing. Respect needs to be earned. Consideration is not dependent on the other person’s actions, but on our own willingness to be kind.)

Healthy values? Honesty, integrity, kindness, and consideration.

Healthy Attitude? I value and respect myself and others, and I will take the time to know what’s important, to me and to the people I choose to associate with, and work toward the highest good for all.

Healthy opinions? I deserve consideration and so do you. I won’t allow others to impose on me and I will not be guilty of imposing on you. I choose not to be a part of the problem, but part of the solution and that’s the way I choose to relate to others.

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The True Quantum Leap

What prevents people, even those who are diligently trying to change their lives and outcomes, from succeeding?  Research suggests that only 5% of what prevents us from succeeding is external conditions, and that 95% is internal beliefs. There is a lot of evidence to back this up.

Think of the people in the world with truly great handicaps that still are accomplishingNick Vijicic great things. An example is Nick Vujicic who was born with no arms and no legs, yet he has an amazingly positive attitude, is happily married, has a beautiful child, and is very successful in his work and life.  (Click on the link to see a video of him delivering his message.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKTg_INHgpc

Most people don’t have anywhere near the challenges of a man with no arms or legs. Those limitations don’t stop Nick, yet there are millions of people with no physical handicaps who are stuck and struggling. Why?  Mindset.

The biggest handicap any of us can have is a mindset handicap. That’s because the subconscious mind is the most powerful force in human functioning. It literally runs the show. Because Nick has the right mindset, the inconvenience of no arms or legs has not stopped him.  Because the healthy, strapping bum begging on the side of the street has a handicapped mindset, the convenience of arms and legs don’t matter.

For years, therapists have sought to eliminate mental and emotional handicaps through “talk therapy” or medication. The most popular form of talk therapy right now is Cognitive Therapy or Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). It helps, to be sure, but because CBT is an outside-in approach; that is, it addresses the conscious mind rather than the subconscious, it takes a lot of time and doesn’t work well for many people.

Sadly, more popular than cognitive or other therapies, is prescribing drugs. This is a real travesty because drugs just mask the real issues and the side-effects are horrific. Masking an issue never removes it, so people with depression continue to be depressed. People with anxiety continue to be anxious. People with “bi-polar disorder” continue to cycle between depression and mania. Mania, by the way, is a state of extreme euphoria and there’s a reason for that. If you want to know more about it read The Origin and Cure for Bipolar Disorder at www.yourcorepersonality.com. Here’s the link to the article.  http://yourcorepersonality.com/the-origin-and-cure-for-bi-polar-disorder/  

To finally get unstuck and take a quantum leap to the life you dream of having, you have to go straight to the source of the problem and get rid of it. Conversations with the conscious mind, affirmations, rituals and pills won’t get you there. To get to the source, you’ll need to make changes at the subconscious level.

The most effective method we know of for doing that is a method called Rapidly Accelerated Mind Patterning (RAMP). RAMP is  a quick, simple, exceptionally effective process that immediately and permanently removes fears, anxieties, emotional blocks, and all kinds of mentally and emotionally based blocks. You can learn more about RAMP at http://www.banishblocks.com.

Life is too short to stay to stay stuck and it’s too short to waste time trying to get where we want to go. The most valuable gift you will ever give yourself or anyone else, is the gift of time well spent.  It is here that we experience that glorious state which Mihaly Czikszentmihalyi describes in his book Flow. It’s what makes life worth living.

Princess DianaWe spend a lot of time chasing money and possessions in search of what we already own. Money, in and of itself, cannot make us happy and neither can all the possessions we can gather. Proof of that is Princess Diana. She was a beautiful woman who was blessed with a perfectly healthy body. She had the life of fairy tales; a prince for a husband, a castle to live in, all the money and privilege she could ever want, two beautiful children who adored her and the adoration of thousands of fans. But they weren’t enough. She had a big hole in her heart that none of those things could fill. Contrast Princess Diana to Nick Vujicic who is living a full and happy life. He knows the value of a time well-spent and he takes full advantage of it.

If you are not as happy, fulfilled and successful as Nick, stop looking outside yourself. The solutions are not out there. Change your mindset and you will change your life. Not at some time in the distant future, but right away and that’s a leap we should all want to take. 

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Is PTSD Really A Disorder?

In February of 2012, I (Sherry) began a study to determine the effectiveness of a method I developed A Suffering Soldierin treating combat related post traumatic stress (PTSD). The method is called Rapidly Accelerated Mind Patterning (RAMP) and it has a long record of exceptional success.  Prior to beginning this independent study, I had worked with victims of childhood and domestic abuse and found the RAMP method very effective at healing those traumas, but had only worked with a few veterans with combat related PTSD.  The veterans got a much faster result than those who had been traumatized by childhood abuse or domestic violence and I thought perhaps it was just a fluke.

I wanted to discover if the easy results of the few I had worked with was the norm and also wanted to establish, in an independent study, the efficacy of the RAMP method in treating combat related PTSD. I partnered with a Texas university, Wayland Baptist University in San Antonio, to conduct the study. The goal was (and still is) to bring 100 to 150 veterans or active service members with combat related PTSD into the study and provide them with free and completely confidential treatment.

We sent out public service announcements, put up flyers all around the school and the dean of the school even went around to the classes and announced the study. Since 65% of the student body at Wayland are veterans, we expected to have all the volunteers we wanted. To our surprise, almost no one responded. Six months into the program, we only had 18 volunteers.  All 18 had phenomenal results. No matter how high their stress and anxiety levels were coming into the program, at the end of just one session, they reported both stress and anxiety at zero.

It has been my experience that when changes are made at a subconscious level, they are permanent. The subconscious mind lives in the here and now, so once a file is updated, it stays updated unless and until the file is purposefully changed again. What I thought was a fluke in the earlier experiences I’d had with veterans, turned out to be a common pattern. Just one session and the symptoms were completely eliminated.

In checking with the early volunteers 3, 6 and 9 months later, they still report being symptom free. I always offer to do another RAMP session if they feel they need one and not a single volunteer has needed another session.

In spite of the phenomenal results, volunteers are still hard to come by. Why? Three reasons:

(1) Post traumatic stress has been labeled as a “disorder”  by the American Psychological Association so is now considered a mental illness. Who wants to admit they are mentally ill?  I sure wouldn’t want to and I’m a psychologist.

(2) There is a lot of misinformation on the streets. Because the methods currently in use don’t get good results (they are mostly designed to help those with post traumatic stress cope), it is assumed and posited by many professionals that PTSD is not curable. So, if it isn’t curable, why bother? Right?

(3) The military culture is such that if you haven’t lost both arms and legs, you should suck it up and be tough. Sadly, veterans and soldiers are suffering needlessly and way too many are committing suicide because they can’t suck it up any longer and don’t believe there is a solution.

I am now on a mission to change the mindset around post traumatic stress. In working with veterans and with those whose source of trauma was childhood abuse or domestic violence, I have found that post traumatic stress is not a disorder at all. What it really is, is a really brilliant defense strategy. People who get PTSD tend to be highly empathetic, have a strong will to live (and let live), and they are unusually very good at strategizing.

The reality is, the troubling symptoms that so many are now suffering with are easily updated and when they are, the symptoms are gone. What’s left is the strength and brilliance of their highly strategic mind. Is there a cure? Who knows and who should care, if the troubling symptoms can be forever gone in one short session, usually done by phone, and the updated files provide new strategies for success.

The very same things that cause those who have PTSD to react to trauma the way they do, gives them a real edge for navigating life successfully once the strategies are aligned with current circumstances. That same high level of alert readiness that kept soldiers alive during combat, easily realign to become strategies for success in the fast-paced world we live in today.

A few veterans, such a Medal of Honor recipient Ty Carter, are out spreading the word. Ty Carter There are still too few voices echoing the fact that PTSD is NOT a disorder. TY Carter is doing that. I hope his fellow veterans are listening. Click on this link to read Ty Carter’s story. http://www.msnbc.com/morning-joe/ptsd-not-disorder-says-medal-honor

If you know a veteran with PTSD, please let them know they are not broken and they are not mentally ill. Tell them they are actually brilliant strategists and that once their old files are updated, their ability to strategize will serve them very well in the civilian world.  Send them to www.thefoundationforpositivechange.org. There they will find an application to participate in the study and will receive free and wholly confidential treatment.

You can learn more about the RAMP method at www.banishblocks.com.

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Strong Women Make Better Marital Partners

In todays society it is still difficult for many women to exert their power because of early childhood negative conditioning and later media advertising messages.

Dr. Fran Cohen Praver discusses how to overcome these limitations and become a truly fulfilled person in an article from Huffington Post January 19, 2012.

With sling-back shoes, shoulder length blonde hair, and a navy tailored suit that revealed her shapely body, Courtney was all woman and all business. A hedge fund manager, she made good money in her professional life but bad choices in her personal life.

In our therapy session Courtney was crying like a baby. Her shoulders caved in, her hands lay limp on her lap, and her sobs drowned out her words. Blowing her nose, she finally muttered. “Adam is angry with me.”

“About what?” I asked.

Wiping her eyes, Courtney explained, “Before we married I had lots of women friends, but now I’m afraid to see them”.

I was stunned and questioned her, “Afraid?”

“Don’t get me wrong. It’s not that Adam doesn’t let me see them; it’s that I know he doesn’t like it. Last night I asked him if I could see Merle and he snapped at me.” A sheepish smile fought with her tears.

“Do you ask permission at work to see a colleague?”I asked.

Courtney smiled and quickly said, “Of course not.”

I inquired, “Why do you think you’re assertive in your professional life and timid in your personal life?”

“Maybe I feel bad that I make more money than Adam. And I’m afraid he will leave me for some woman in his workplace. They’re probably air-headed, not threatening, and hotter than me.”

A successful, confident, autonomous woman in her work life, Courtney has lost her confidence and relinquished her power and autonomy in her marital life. It seems that at an unconscious level, she assumed a stereotypical male role at work, and a stereotypical female role at home. At work she was the brainy boss and at home she was the child bride.

Like Courtney, many women in the 21st century, still bifurcate their gender roles. They reserve their strengths for their work life and lose sight of them in their marital lives. And so they are half a woman in either case. But whole men want whole women — women who are strong and soft, tough and tender, secure and vulnerable, assertive and yielding, competitive and cooperative, loving and lustful. It is no wonder Courtney fears her spouse will cheat.

In my practice, I find that young women, particularly college age students, depend on men to shore them up. Their emotional boundaries are blurred and in an effort to please their men, these women go up and down with their moods. That’s not to say that women should not try to please their spouses or to depend on them for love, emotional, and sexual fulfillment. It’s when the pendulum swings too far and a woman loses her self-worth that peril sets in.

Why then do women not always savor their strengths in all phases of life? For one thing, societal media messages bombard us with skinny anorexic models, sexy scantily clad women, and beauty products or cosmetic surgery promoting unhealthy methods to obtain superficial outer beauty.

What about inner beauty, assertion, independence and autonomy? Not only is this not valued, it has been denigrated in recent days. Take the example Sonia Sotomayor’s Supreme Court Justice’s confirmation hearings in which she was denigrated as “emotional’ and “empathic.” These terms would never be used if she was a man.

The closest the media comes to applauding a strong independent woman is the character of Lizbeth Salander in “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.” The New Yorker has applauded her as a new kind of heroine that many young women want to emulate. In fact, she is anorexic, pierced, and seeks brutal and pornographic revenge on her abuser; hardly a healthy role model for young women.

These and other societal messages along with old childhood scripts continue to sway how women perceive themselves. The result is that these repeated scripts get lodged in your brain. But there is good news: the brain is plastic and it can change. When you begin to savor your strengths and face your frailties you can counter these old noxious scripts and replace them with positive, life affirming, self-esteem strengthening new scripts. Not only that, but your spouse — who is connected to you with mirror neurons — will be thrilled with your new stronger self. By the way, mirror neurons are miniscule brain cells behind the eye sockets that link intimate partners at an internal world, in their unconscious thoughts, needs, desires, attitudes, feelings, and intentions.

Think of your self-worth as a garden that you will weed by countering insidious messages and planting new healthy ones.

Let’s begin with denigrating societal messages. For example, you may feel unappealing when you compare your body with the bodies of adolescent girls. In that case, change how you view yourself by taking inventory of your strengths as though you were writing a resume. List your talents, your ability to cope with difficult situations, your kindness, inner beauty, or accomplishments.

Another scenario, similar to Courtney’s that may arise is that you feel comfortable being in control in your career but you dumb yourself down with your spouse. If this is the case, I suggest you relish your strengths in your career as this will help build your self esteem. Connected with mirror neurons, once you respect yourself, your spouse can’t help but respect you.

Now let’s go on to examples of damaging childhood messages. If superficial beauty was more valued than brains or inner beauty you may feel you do not measure up. Or you may not have succeeded as well in school or in the playground and you have internalized critical voices that tell you that you are not good enough. Counter those voices and replace them with ones of approval. Rewrite the message of “I am not good enough” to “I did the best I could do at the time.” This will help bolster your self esteem as you focus on your assets.

If your parents did not validate your real strengths and had their own expectations, you may feel ashamed or guilty for not pleasing them. If you rebelled and made mistakes along the way, cherish the freedom you gained by living authentically. Taking risks and falling on your face granted you valuable experience from which you have grown stronger. Plunging right into life and love is much more fulfilling than living on the fringes. Not only that but you won’t bemoan any lost opportunities.

Then again, you may have complied with parental expectations and lost your true self. You may now feel that life is constrained and that you are a prisoner to other people’s expectations. The resolution lies in freeing yourself and beginning a journey of life and love your way. Imagine what you can engage in now that thought you could not succeed in and do it. Let go of your inhibitions and try things you never would like dancing, singing, playing an instrument, wearing a teeny bikini or a risqué negligee with your spouse.

These are only some of the ways you can savor your strengths on the way to living and loving fully as a strong woman. One of the benefits from following these strategies to rewire your brain and repair you self is the effect it has on your marriage. Your spouse — linked to you with mirror neurons — will feel more attracted to you and more stimulated by your emerging strengths. Brain chemicals like dopamine, oxytocin, vassopresson, testosterone and estrogen that promote love and lust will flow more freely between you. Remember strong women are not only better marital partners but they are better lovers.

To learn more about who you truly are and came into the world to be go to www.coremap.com

 

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The Lack of Upward Mobility in the Poor

Writer Glennie Burks defines the major societal problem, why so few are rising above the status of poverty, in today’s January 18, 2014 Dallas Morning News Opinion Column. It, also, compliments today’s post at https://twitter.com/LawofAbundance. Both postings deal with the problem of an inherent mindset that needs to be changed.

This month’s BCS national championship game between Florida State and Auburn renewed my hope in upward mobility for anyone who is hardworking and committed. Auburn University went from the worst team in the Southeastern Conference to the top and represented the SEC in the national championship game. Despite losing the game, this group of young men provided their followers many life lessons. Those lessons this season were perseverance, hard work and dedication.

If you watched the game, you know these attributes have the power to launch anyone from the bottom to the top. Yet, a Pew survey discovered that younger Americans (18-34) are more likely than older Americans (35-54) to credit attaining wealth to family inheritance and connections. Meanwhile, older Americans attribute wealth attainment to hard work, education and ambition.

While there is some indication that upward mobility in the U.S may be determined by family background, what does the Pew survey say about what we are teaching our kids about the value of a strong work ethic? We know that most people born poor in the U.S. are likely to be poor. Similarly, children born to wealthy families grow up to be wealthy adults. The assumption is that children in most cases climb the social economic ladder on the same trajectory as their parents.

Recently, we’ve talked a lot about the 50-year War on Poverty. This policy, initiated by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, was designed to mitigate the harmful effects of being poor. Before the policy’s inception, there was stifling poverty in the U.S. Many diseases, often a result of malnutrition, plagued the country. Food and medical programs established during this era have been successful. However, we’ve also seen wage stagnation, and the percentage of Americans who still receive federal assistance and the cost of these programs have grown beyond most expectations. Policymakers will continue to advocate for programs aimed at reducing poverty. But they must address the causes of poverty and not the symptoms. In fact, we can make a bad situation worse when we focus on the wrong thing.

Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation suggests that policies directed at reducing poverty have discouraged upward mobility. He maintains that these initiatives have created a class of dependency and that the children in such households are less likely to attend college, thus excluding most of them from good-paying jobs in a knowledge-based economy. In spite of all the grim data, I am hopeful because many of us do overcome numbers and statistics.

Here in Dallas, my mother-in-law, who has a high school diploma and is a vocational nurse, does not have a college degree. She and her husband raised six children, all of whom have triumphed over common stereotypes and low expectations. Each of their children has a college degree, and two have gone on to attain graduate and professional degrees. I asked her how they were able to raise six children to be overachievers. She responded, “My husband and I had rules.”

Regardless of social class or education, parents’ expectation of their child’s success may be the one metric that most of the surveys on U.S. upward mobility lack. I realize some funding is essential to many critical areas when we address the upward mobility gap, but a good start is right at home with setting real expectations and rules.

Glennie Burks of Grand Prairie is a commissioned officer in the Army and a Community Voices volunteer columnist. His email address is [email protected].
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