Toggle navigation Menu Toggle navigation. Fraternity serenades season. And what better way to do that than to sing us a song? Emerald Podcast. As a professional CEO for over twenty years, the challenges in business is that you need to equip yourself with the right information or you are dead in the water! People with my condition now do have my book to prepare for the future because there is one and it's up to the individual to believe! Being married for 35 years is a huge accomplishment, what is the secret to your success that you can share with younger couples looking to hopefully have the same success in their marriages?
I think if both couples feel like they can't wait to share a new idea with one another or are not prepared to go anywhere without their partner by their side, then this is the only secret that any younger couples must desire for a successful marriage!
These two examples will resolve all arguments that every couples get into a marriage too or later! From a life lesson perspective what are some of the key points that you hope others can take away from your story 'Iron Boy' and even more so what is something that you hope you leave behind to your children that you hope they can apply to their own lives?
My children have been raised to see the person, and not the disability, that they have. I would like for a life lesson that the world can refer to us as "people first" regardless the disability one has. People with a disability and not disabled people…always put "people" first. See the person and not the disability!
How do you feel now? How is life after the 'miracle' treatment and is there any message that you would like to share with others who are struggling with the same challenges that you faced but that you are also facing here today? I feel very grateful and life is wonderful for me and my family. Although health issue will continue to always be a big issue for me, I will deal with them each one at a time. The important thing is that young people worldwide with my condition can inspire others to do great things would something I would love to inspire!
Aging can make getting around much harder. Make sure your parents are safe in their own home by following these tips. There is going to come a time when your parents need a little help to safely live in their home.
This is just an inevitable part of life. The goal is to keep your parents as comfortable as possible while also knowing that they will be safe when alone. Luckily, it is fairly easy to make a few adjustments to the house that drastically improve its livability for seniors. These are the four things you must do to help your parents create a safe home as they age.
Poor eyesight, reduced hearing, and imbalance put older individuals at risk of falling while moving around the house. Falling is actually the main cause for injured seniors. Since this is a dangerous problem, you need to remove all fall hazards from their house immediately. Throw rugs, long cords, and old unused furniture all pose a huge risk. Make the house as open as possible. Walking up stairs puts a lot of stress on older bodies.
They have to use all of their strength just to go up a flight of stairs. There is also a major injury risk if they fall while using the stairs. Avoid all of these dangers by adding a stair lift in the house. Stair lifts will safely go up and down the stairs whenever needed with absolutely no risk of injury. The slippery surfaces in the bathroom make it one of the most dangerous rooms in the house for your older parents.
There are several changes you need to make to ensure they stay safe. Put rubber mats inside and outside of the tub to prevent slipping. Add grab bars in the shower and next to the toilet. It is also a good idea to lower the temperature on the water heater to stop accidental burns in the shower. The best thing you can do to make sure your aging parents are safe in their home is by making regular visits to see them.
In addition to spending valuable time with your family, you will also be able to access the house and your parent's well-being during these trips. Make sure some of your visits are unannounced to get a true sense of how they are living.
Your parents took care of you your entire life, so it is now time to repay the favor. Making these changes to the house will let your parents have independent lives in their own home for as long as possible. His music is a unique mixture of chill rap, alt-pop, and bedroom pop. On top of that, his youthful nature is portrayed so exuberantly through social media. He showcases such vulnerability and relatability through his music and personality.
Overall, he's definitely an artist to have on your radar. It's insane to me that he only has about 2,00 monthly listeners on Spotify. He has a sound that would really thrive in today's music scene and I think he is extremely underrated.
Definitely give them a listen! His lyrics and flow are so smooth and sounds like he's already an established artist. He could easily compete with rappers today. While his music discusses girls and drugs, he also uses his platform to advocate for human rights movements like BLM. If you like rap, there is something for everyone with his work. This funky fresh group focuses on really catchy indie-pop songs. However, I definitely think they are on that track so I suggest you hop on the train now while they're still lesser-known.
Their sound is really desirable so I can imagine it's only a matter of time before they blow up. This singer-songwriter is extremely talented. To increase our good public relations with the other organizations on campus, we serenaded every organization over the course of the semester as a way to thank them for supporting us and all their hard work on campus.
At our campus, it's one of the requirements for the new members. The fraternities will come serenade the sororities and vice versa. It's so much fun. When the fraternities come to our house, the usually will sing a few songs and then have our new members go by their new members Delta Sig has our new girls sit on their knee and will sing them a sweetheart song.
At some point, they will introduce all of their new members. Different houses will bring different things. SAE always makes us a paddle from their new members. Other houses will make cookies or bring flowers.
Whenever we go serenading, we usually bring cookies over to all the fraternities. Serenading is a really fun thing we do, and it's something I always look forward to! We had serenades for our philanthropy last fall, and one of the houses wrote us a poem Faces like angels Hearts filled with love When Kappa babies are born They're touched from above Lambda Chi also put their mom in their skit most of our serenades involve a little skit, too and her character was to play OUR house mom That's always fun to see how well they know us and stuff One year, when I was still a collegiate, one of the fraternities invited all the sorority housemothers to dinner on a Monday night which was sorority meeting night.
They served it very formal. They sent each of the sororities a candle and a note and told what time we were suppose to light the candle and then open the note. We were told that our housemother had been kidnapped and the ransom to get her back was for us to serenade both the bothers and the housemothers. Was really a lot of fun. I grew up in a small southern college town. The Sigma Chi house was located just a few blocks down from our home.
When I was ten, while my older biological brother was an undergrad, the chapter decided to go all out for the All Campus Sing festival that spring. At the time the chapter didn't have a piano, so my brother asked my Mother - who is a Sigma Sigma Sigma - if it would be ok to 'borrow' our piano it was an upright and take it down the street to the chapter house.
My Mother reluctantly agreed. After all, she knew what it meant to be Greek. Because my Mother had agreed to help, the chapter decided to do something special for her. My brother enlisted me and my next oldest brother who also became a Sig to be sure that our Mother would be home when they came for the piano.
Well, when the night came to pick up the piano, the whole chapter quietly assembled outside our home and began to serenade our Mother. Side note: We also lived across from a woman's dorm and we could see all the lights coming on in the rooms with the girls lining up to see what was going on. They were all very much moved. Once our Mother heard the singing, she went to our front door and quickly realized what was going on. I remember to this day how touched she was.
And when the chapter sang "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" to her, tears sprang to her eyes. After they were done, each member came in and paid their respects to my Mother and presented her with a bouquet of flowers.
Then they gently - or so we were told - took the piano down to the chapter house. Postscript: The chapter won All Campus Sing that year, and for many more years to come. Postscript 2: After that, 'the boys' - as my Mother called 'her' Sigs - were allowed to borrow the piano every year until the chapter purchased their own. She was so won over that one year - shortly thereafter - she allowed the chapter to use her grandmother's china for parents' weekend. Before hand, she instructed the chapter on proper manners and etiquette.
And of course she was present for the event to 'officially' help. Yet in reality she was there to be sure that nothing happened to her grandmother's china. I guess you could say that while my brothers were with the chapter, she sort of became an unofficial 'house mom' for the chapter. All because of a night of serenading. Way too often, these types of activities go unnoticed outside the people involved. Yet, it is the 'little things' a chapter does - living by the ideals and principals that the fraternity was founded upon - that is the true heart and soul of the brotherhood.
The same with sororities. Recently my brother's fraternity same campus, and my best friends threatened to kidnap me, take me to their house and duct-tape a bottle to my hand, and not release me until my sisters came and sang to them to get me back They would've done it too, had me thrown over my brother's shoulder and walking out the door of our hall, when four or five of my sisters saw them and made them put me down At the time I was upset I'd had a bad day too and kicked them off the hall, but looking back, it was really funny Also, one of the fraternities on our campus Either Delta Chi or Sigma Nu I think has their new members come and serenade our new members I had scarlet fever that day, and unfortunately couldn't make it, so I don't remember who it was.
I head that they were great, however! I wish we would get sung to more often. We always serenaded the girls at Hooters during rush week. One of the coolest memories was when one of our brothers proposed to his wife, then girlfriend, at her sorority meeting.
We invaded the Alpha Phi's meeting planned in advance by both groups about 8ish. We serenaded the Alpha Phi president, our brother's chic, while our brother gave her the ring and the girls all went bonkers. They've been happily married for a few years now. Fraternally Yours, Boodleboy My brother's lavaliering to his girlfriend was very sweet. Her AXiD chapter was having an xmas party and asked some of his fraternity brothers to be elves.
He wanted to be an elf too but he was too big for the costume.
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