Watching it on ye laptop just wasn't "experience" enough, so after my last post I got dressed and drove to my old stake center -- I don't know where my current stake center is located! I was really shocked because I seem to remember on Sunday afternoon sessions there were so many people that they filled the cultural hall with rows of chairs -- today, the turn-out was so wee that the chapel wasn't filled.
Is it cos it's Easter Sunday? I felt the spirit profoundly -- but I always feel a bit darkened when they speak about "the current threat to the family," as I feel they are talking, in part, about gay adoption. Am I being paranoid? Gay families are real families, and the many I know have moral standards, discipline, love, &c. Anyway, despite that little flame of gay rights advocate within me, I loved this afternoon's session. Listening to that awesome choir never fails to melt me.
Is it cos it's Easter Sunday? I felt the spirit profoundly -- but I always feel a bit darkened when they speak about "the current threat to the family," as I feel they are talking, in part, about gay adoption. Am I being paranoid? Gay families are real families, and the many I know have moral standards, discipline, love, &c. Anyway, despite that little flame of gay rights advocate within me, I loved this afternoon's session. Listening to that awesome choir never fails to melt me.
). An education is very important, but there are other ways to educate oneself outside of the typical four-year university. My fear is not that my daughters will forego a college education, it's that they will stop learning throughout their entire life. A mom who dropped out of college, but continues to read and study is much more prolific in my eyes than a mom who got her degree and spends her days watching soap operas and eating bon bons while her kids play video games (consider this last sentence a very big generalization but hopefully it gets my point across).
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