Thứ Sáu, 19 tháng 10, 2018

Waching daily Oct 20 2018

hey guys, today we're gonna try Bullsone New Nanotech Wax for White Car

the difference between this and other wax is i can easily see the wax on the white paint

unlike any other wax that's sometime i use more wax than needed

this is the durability test

there's no more water beading so this is it guys

i hope this helps

don't forget to check links in the description

thanks for watching

For more infomation >> Car Wax Test : Bullsone Nanotech White Wax - Duration: 2:33.

-------------------------------------------

G-Mik Season 2: Borj and Roni (#7) - Duration: 3:21.

Take care

Did you and Yuan cross paths?

Yes, I saw him on the way here

Anyway, where are you going?

I'm going to visit Jelai, hopefully

You?

Nothing really

I'm visiting you

But if you are leaving

If you want to walk with me down the road that's fine but if not, then I'll go ahead

It's fine but

As long as you don't court me as we're walking

I mean we're friends right?

Alright, let's go

Where should I start?

I haven't told you that in a while

So that you won't forget

No, maybe she'll get mad

You're walking with me down the road but you're being silent

I feel like I'm alone

It's hard

I don't know what to say

All I think about is emotions

Maybe you'll think that I'm courting you

I don't want to break my promise so I decided not to court you

Besides, I'm just walking with you

How come back then, when I have no idea that you have feelings for me

It would be easier for us to have a fun conversation

Plus, you were being stubborn

It was better back then

I would visit you frequently

With long conversations

Without someone stopping us

I regretted telling you that I liked you

If you never told me then I wouldn't be this excited

If I only I have to guts to tell you how I really feel

What did you say?

Nothing

I heard you said something

Nothing, I said that we need to hurry before Jelai leaves

Weird, isn't it?

It's like Jelai's mom has changed a lot

Actually, Auntie Emily is not like what she used to be

You know the last time I saw her, she wasn't like that

You know If I never met Auntie Marla

Maybe I would think that she's Jelai's mom

Your mom was like Auntie Emily in a way right?

But my mom was like that from the beginning

But do you think that Auntie Emily would be a good influence to Jelai?

It's just that I can't stand seeing Auntie Emily smoke in front of Jelai

For more infomation >> G-Mik Season 2: Borj and Roni (#7) - Duration: 3:21.

-------------------------------------------

How do you describe this?(55) (Vocabulary Building) [ ForB English Lesson ] - Duration: 1:16.

Hello everyone and welcome back to ForB's English lesson video.

My name is Richard and today we're gonna take a look at a video

and I'd like you to guess what is happening.

Are you ready?

Let's take a look.

Alright.

Could you guess the answer?

Alright, the answer is "the cat is meowing."

The cat is meowing.

Alright, "meow" is the sound a cat makes.

Alright?

So let's practice this sentence together.

Please repeat after me.

The cat is meowing.

Good. One more time.

The cat is meowing.

Great!

So if you see a cat making this sound you know it's meowing.

Alright?

So my name is Richard.

Remember to please click like, share, and subscribe and I'll catch you next time.

For more infomation >> How do you describe this?(55) (Vocabulary Building) [ ForB English Lesson ] - Duration: 1:16.

-------------------------------------------

J&J Clips That Get Me Every Time [CC] - Duration: 5:18.

Jenna: Hey what's up you guys?!

Julien: Hey what's up you guys?!

Jenna: Are you okay?

Julien: roar

Wayfair you got just what I need

Ohh waaahaaahaa

Jenna: GIVE ME YOUR MOUTH!

- Honey put it in neutral cause we're rolling.

Hahaha

Ow! I got something in my eye!

Jenna: You know that it's a stressful week when Marbles get constipated,

right Julien?

Julien: Absolutely.

That boy speaks volumes with his bowel movements.

Julien: I'll go to my room.

Julien: *barks*

give me your

*wheezes and laughs*

- Pasta by hand

*scoffs* yeah it's called

Postmates.

Julien: Burglar summer chic.

Jenna: What places you into robbin?

- mostly high fashion bars, I go into bars that people are

dressed really nice in and I take the money behind the register.

But I can't just walk in like anybody I gotta blend in.

Nothing will slow me down, not no man.

- This isn't what I had envisioned.

Julien: You're so friendly, what's your name?

Both: nagyangyang *growling type sound*

Jenna: Alright you can take that one off.

Julien take this one off

*Ear piercing Aries slurps*

Julien: Stick a fork in me,

cuz I'm done.

- Who wants to brush their fuckin teeth?

- Next.

Winter.

Julien: I agree marble you could have taken him.

Both: Laughing

Jenna: Did you just fall down?

Jenna: That guy's either a pro snowboarder or

like a pro trust fund baby.

Julien: ehhhhhh

*smack smack*

*Loud swallow*

- Oh! My! God!

Jenna: You look like you fell into a wood chipper.

Both: laughing

Jenna: I need somewhere I can put my bath bombs

in the bathroom. You know?

- Just put it in a bomb shelter

a bath bomb shelter.

Jenna: Like this one better...

*Wheezing and laughing*

Julien: *Gasping for air while laughing*

I was trying to get them out,

but they're in there.

Am I right Ladies and men and

my non-binary friends.

*Click, kiss, whistle*

This is not what I envisioned when I wanted to be a toothbrush.

Marble: *Barks*

Jenna: *Gasps*

Julien: Okay Okay.

Jenna: You're being rude.

Marble what you can't see can't hurt you.

Marble: *Barks*

Jenna: *Gasps*

It can hurt him!

- You look so cute and pretty...

oh..

Julien: RIGHT NOW I'M IN THE STATE OF MIIIIND

*clicks lounge*

But look at the bright side

- What's the bright side?

- I don't know

Both: *laughing*

Jenna: Just saying look at the bright side

- I don't know what it is just look at it

Jenna: !JULIEN!

V/O: BITCH WHAT THE FUCK?!

Jenna: Look number two!

- Ponytail tour!

Julien: Marbles uses the art of rage to find his way back home.

- TACTILE

Julien: What's this back here?

Jenna: What?

-Okay get in the car.

There he go, there he go, there he go, there he go.

Jenna: I'm scared of you just like

Julien: Ohhhh, Hello.

- That looks like the most exquisite mullet ever.

- Who is she?

-I programmed our Google home last night

while you weren't home to only play Christian rock so

- Actually I'm down you

- Who said you could come here?

Jenna: You look like a discount Hulk Hogan.

Both: Hey brother.

Jenna: *wispers* He just read that sign

and thought that was a dog.

does he think that's a dog?

He thinks that's a dog.

Julien: That's the smartest dumbest thing he's ever done.

- You haven't seen your opponent yet, it's a late fill-in.

you're in the Octagon. He walks up it's dark, the lights turn on, you see this.

Jenna: I would shit my pants.

- Things we've learned today.

Christian rock bumps.

Julien: Sorry. Something just went all the way

down through my throat.

Jenna: Honestly leaving the house is a waste of time.

- First of all, put these on.

no no take your glasses off.

- Okay I look like Bret Michaels.

Jenna: Why are you walking like that?

- Hello do you care?

care about my things.

Julien: it looks great -thank you.

You're almost there Congrats.

- Thank you. -You're welcome.

- I've already abused it a little bit by taking it out of its package, you know

I was real rough with it. But like welcome to the world bitch.

- If I, we get those like light colored chairs how am I gonna

die people's hair?

Julien: Ummm

People's?

Like me?

- Everybody's hair

Julien: Oh my god...

- Nobody's hair is safe.

- Like Who Is She?

*Loud drop*

Jenna: Hey, you know...

- RIGHT NOW I'M IN THE STATE OF MIND

I WANNA BE IN LIKE ALL THE TIME

Jenna: Did you just break your glasses?

- Ain't got no tears left to cry

* Loud ripping*

Jenna: *softly* why? why? why?

Julien: *shouts* REEAAT

Jenna: *aggressively* SHHHHHHHH

No making Aries noises.

*aggressively rips Styrofoam*

Jenna: Okay don't start with the sas-

- Pick up my dry cleaners.

- I said I wanted to be a toothbrush for Halloween and here we are.

Julien: A shining example of chasing your dreams every day.

- Thank you! I try to do my best.

Like life is short but also like

terribly and insufferably long at the same time.

Be a Toothbrush!

Julien: Truer words have never been spoken from a toothbrush.

For more infomation >> J&J Clips That Get Me Every Time [CC] - Duration: 5:18.

-------------------------------------------

MY YOUTUBE GEAR! - Duration: 4:54.

For this video I will show you my equipments in making a video.

My weapons for battle.

I made a video about this before but there are new additions to the family.

because you cannot just use one equipment

You have to evolve.

For video I use 2 cameras,

Mark 1, and mark 2, because you know..

The one I'm using right now is the Mark 1

This camera is the Sony a5000

This is the perfect camera for people who are starting out,

but it has no mic input.

Sometimes, no matter how beautiful a thing is, there will always be some shortcomings.

So I record the audio separately.

Though, the audio in Sony is not bad.

This is the raw audio of Sony,

The sound is a bit scattered, but that will do, right?

For audio what I use is the Zoom H1.

It's great because it's portable, you can bring it anywhere,

not shameful

small, it also has a mic input

It's a recorder that has a mic input

You can put some external mic

a Lavalier, etc.

Put it here and start talking, but I don't have money for that so forget about it.

This is the Mark 2

GoPro Hero 5, with attached mic adapter,

and connected to a Rode VideoMicro.

Just like a make up artist.

Because we all know that GoPro has bad audio, right?

If you watch the last video I made showing my equipments

I use the raw audio of the GoPro in that video.

If you compare that to this video it's better, right?

The Mark 2 also has a case

to hold the mic, so that it will be more convenient

and sometimes I put a gorilla pod

for it to be more convenient

and I look professional holding it.

If you see me walking in the street like this

you'll think that I'm a famous vlogger

but in reality I'm just starting out.

For lighting what I use is the Neewer ringlight

It's 18 inches

Huge, right?!

It doesn't get hot even if you use it for a long time.

Unlike others that when you ask a small favor,

you'll hear so many complains

I also look like a celebrity in here

Also for audio when I'm not using the Zoom,

I have the Blue Yeti USB mic.

It's very useful especially when you need a mic that can capture everything.

You can even hear the gossips from your neighbors.

If you watched my ASMR video,

I only used half the power of that mic

what more if I used it at full power

I might hear you right now.

I'm also thinking of videos using that mic

Also, my phone

This is very important

This is where i note everything

because sometimes when you're doing something

then you think of an idea

I will put in my notes right away

because for sure I will forget about the idea.

I also use this to text some ladies.

My editing software is Adobe Premiere Pro,

and for thumbnail is Adobe Photoshop.

And those are my equipments/gear

My weapons for battle!

It's 18 inches, huge right?!

You know what else is 18 inches?

For more infomation >> MY YOUTUBE GEAR! - Duration: 4:54.

-------------------------------------------

Doğan Karabulut - Ah Bu Ben Cover - Duration: 3:00.

For more infomation >> Doğan Karabulut - Ah Bu Ben Cover - Duration: 3:00.

-------------------------------------------

Radiohead - Codex - Lyrics video - Duration: 4:34.

To see this one with original sound,

click the link below the video↴

For more infomation >> Radiohead - Codex - Lyrics video - Duration: 4:34.

-------------------------------------------

Top 22 Best Beautiful Eye Makeup Compilation 2018 | Makeup Tutorials For Beginners - Duration: 10:24.

Top 22 Best Beautiful Eye Makeup Compilation 2018 - Makeup Tutorials For Beginners

Thank you for watching !

Hope you can enjoy my video !

For more infomation >> Top 22 Best Beautiful Eye Makeup Compilation 2018 | Makeup Tutorials For Beginners - Duration: 10:24.

-------------------------------------------

The County Seat - Summit County Drug Court - Duration: 28:51.

As recent events have proven, there are a

hundred ways to end up addicted to opioids,

out of options and on the street. There are only

a few options to make your way back. Hello

again and welcome to The County Seat, I'm

Chad Booth while recent episodes of our show

have addressed the growing concern of Opioid

addiction and the ways we are combating it, we

have not recently looked at how to recover

from it. Today we shall take such a journey as

we explore one county's effort to give convicted

addicts their day in court. A special court. So

let's find out a bit about it right now in The

Basics.

Overcoming addiction can be tough, one of the

tools that local governments use to help people

overcome their addictions is Drug Court, What

is a Drug Court? Drug Court is a problem

solving court that provides an alternative

sentence to long term jail and/or prison time.

This alternative sentence includes long term

substance abuse treatment and supervision.

Drug Court takes a public health approach using

a team of people dedicated to the long term

recovery of each drug court participant. This

dedicated team includes mental health and

substance abuse professionals, law

enforcement, peer support, prosecution and

defense attorneys, social services, and a Judge.

Each Drug Court is state certified and each

member of the team attends multiple training

sessions each year.

Drug Courts in Utah have been around for over

20 years! Drug Court was created to combat

the rising number of drug related crimes in all

of our communities. In recent years arrests for

drug related crimes have more than doubled

and the same offenders are appearing in the

same court system over and over. The

traditional approach of jail time and heavy fines

was not addressing the problem of addiction,

which is often at the root of the criminal

behavior.

Drug Court works by recognizing that unless the

substance abuse ends the criminal behavior will

continue. Through frequent drug testing,

treatment, supervision, and weekly court dates

the drug court participant is given not only the

tools to succeed and maintain sobriety but also

the support to stop the criminal behavior and

stay sober.

While the team and the Court are with the

participant every step of the way, Drug Court is

still a voluntary program and takes a lot of

dedication and commitment on the part of the

participant for the program to work

successfully. Each Drug Court participant must

be dedicated to starting to live their life sober

and on the right side of the law. Now that you

have a basic understanding of what a Drug

Court is we will pick up the discussion how the

Drug Court System in Summit County works,

when we return. For the Summit County

Sheriff's Office I am Felicia Sotelo

Welcome back to The County Seat our

conversation today about drug court and

Summit county and a program that they have in

place up there that has a pretty good track

record of graduates joining us for the

conversation Councilmen Roger Armstrong

from the Summit County council and John Evan

who is a detective from the Summit County

Police Department thank you for joining us

today.

Thank you for having us.

out of this program compared to some of the

big cities have drug court programs 25

graduates a year may not seem like much how

is that an impact for Summit county.

I think it is big there has been a program for

many years that helped with the addiction

process and gave them the tools to stay sober

while they are out of the system and it

progresses as a drug court goes it teaches them

how to stay sober and avenues to go down if

they have a chance to relapse or thinking of

relapsing.

Is relapsing does that happen in the process of

the court?

We hope it does not but in the process of the

drug court it is built in because it does happen

usually the first couple of months the first 2 or 3

phases but the program is built around relapse

so it does not punish you per say it does not let

you go out in the community and give back to

the community.

But if you are constantly relapsing is there a

point where you are done with the program and

they refer you back to the court?

Of course if you constantly relapse you have

proven that you are using the tools that you

have been given and the drug court team will

decide whether they stay or go usually they try

not to do that but it has happened in the past

alternative to a sentence in a traditional jail or

incarceration environment.

I do not like to say alternative it's a voluntary

program the person volunteers for it we sit

down with them myself and Deputy Sotelo and

go over the outline of what drug court is about

with the defense attorney and the prosecutor

and they decide if they want to do it. It is 100%

volunteer we do not force it based upon the

client themselves.

So there is a component within this program

that the participants themselves have to come

up with 550 dollars a month to be in they pay to

be in the program. Does that skin in the game

make a difference?

Skin in the game makes a huge difference. If

you look at what we are trying to do is we are

trying to take some of the pressure off our jails

the jails are the worst place to try and

rehabilitate people that are addicted to drugs or

alcohol so this is an opportunity for them to

take an opportunity to take responsibility for

their own recovery as this is what this is all

about it takes financial pressure off our jail

system and it allows them to find a path to

success. You are asking about relapse any kind

of addiction recovery system relapse is part of

that there are people that may go through

programs 1 2 or 3 times and they relapse the 4th

time may be the time they finally recover and it

is all part of the process I think if you look at

what we are dealing with here if you want to

view it as a matter of personal responsibility

then I think it is a system that is largely set up to

fail. If your view is people should not be using

drugs and if they are we should lock them up

you are not giving the benefit to the community

of getting people out of the system and you are

not getting benefit to the offenders of giving

them an opportunity to get well. If you look at

it as a disease model which I think is the greater

trend these days this is an opportunity to treat

a disease we would not take somebody who

was failing to take their insulin or eating food

they should not eat if they have diabetes and

punish them for the we try to get them well a

that is how we approach that particular disease

this is just another form of disease and the jail

system is exactly the wrong place to treat the

disease it's better to treat it on the outside

through the programs that are designed to do

that.

But obviously if somebody is addicted and they

are involved in illicit drug activity that is against

the law the threat of it becomes a lever to try

and help them want to improve themselves so

the regular process does have a place in the

whole system does it not?

I think it does but I think if you look at from a

spectrum there is the person that is out there

who is dealing drugs they are using firearms in

the course of that particular business running

they are selling and using drugs and other illegal

things those people probably do not qualify for

this type of program they are automatically

disqualified but we live in a community where

we have world class athletes want to be world

class athletes and people who admire world

class athletes and want to recreate like they do

and you have tourists coming in for those

narrow terms that they are here to ski and hike

and play hard they get hurt they have surgeries

they are prescribed pain medications for those

surgeries and for some of those people those

pain medications are the route in do we punish

them when the pain medication and they have

become addicted the doctor no longer wants to

write a prescription for the pain meds they are

so addicted they have to get it someplace else

and they slide into heroin especially the lower

economic scale that cannot find another

substitute for that it may not have access to

health care to do that do we punish those

people or do we provide them with a road to

get out.

Keep in mind, this is not our particular program

may or may not be replicated other places. I

think part of what makes our program work are

the deputies we have working in it. John is

unbelievable, Felicia is unbelievable they go so

far above and beyond the simple requirements

of the job to assist folks and probably the best

way to characterize it to assist them in their

own recovery. It's not that there are allowing

them to not take responsibility but they are

monitoring them very closely so the

opportunities that they have to not complete it

are reduced substantially and the opportunities

to do well are increased. And it's remarkable

the relationships that these two form with

people that they are working with goes beyond

a law enforcement officer and offender. Its I

think a special relationship and I am not sure

that happens every place.

So what we do we have 68 people not in drug

court and 25 people in drug court we talk to

those people every day 7 days a week 365 days

a year? There is heavy accountability if they do

something we get them in front of the judge

quickly we can call a judge any time day or night

and they will answer and respond accordingly

but it's the accountability part they know we

are there and we are listening and we also

assist them in getting housing and relationships

with businesses up there in Park City that will

give anybody an interview that we send their

way if they have an opening. We have taken a

holistic approach to it to help them through the

system not getting into the vicious cycle of the

system.

Roger I want to address something that you

alluded to a bit earlier that some people see

this that drugs are bad and people should not

be there they should be punished. Was drug

court a hard sell from a policy and public official

standpoint?

Not for us and I think Summit council we tend

to be on that end of the political spectrum that

will actually consider programs that have an

opportunity to work we saw early on when they

implemented the drug court program we were

seeing successes and beyond and it just made

sense. The legislature opted the JRI initiative a

while back and that's unfunded mandate for

the counties so we do not have a bed to detox

people and a hospital in Summit county we

have had conversation with intermountain

about trying to come up with a bed we don't

have the ability to do that so they detox people

in jail again not such a great place to do it but as

we started and particular as we started to see

the success the first drug court graduation that I

went to was remarkable when you see

somebody who comes into a program at the

end of the line they are addicted to drugs and

probably committing crimes to support that

drug addiction and they are out of resources

suddenly you get them the choice is incarcerate

put them up for some period of time the

legislature changed some felonies to

misdemeanors so we get to keep those people

incarcerated in our jail rather than shipping

them off to the state prison so we can do that I

guess its money that you do not recoup in any

way its money that is supporting them for the

term that they are in jail where as they come

back in so it is lost money. Or you can spend

the money on trying to rehabilitate them and

bring them back as a productive person in

society and it's all part of the mental health

effort for us as well where we have to look at

this kind of illness as a mental illness that is the

problem.

do each of you think people should know that

we have not covered in this conversation. One

thing John that you would like people to know.

Addicts are people too. They put their pants on

the same way that we do, one leg at a time.

Give them a chance. I have seen them and I

have seen numerous people change their lives

just give them a chance.

Do they make good employees?

They make awesome employees.

More motivated than some of their

contemporaries.

When you have a jail sentence hanging over

your head you are very motivated.

Roger your last thoughts.

I think understanding we are in crisis in America

right now when it comes to addiction. We have

to find various ways to deal with that that are

probably nontraditional and it requires us to

change our thinking a little bit and viewing the

people that are addicted are human beings and

trying to find solution that work for society and

for those people dealing with addiction. This is

a very important component for doing it and I

admire John and Felicia and everybody else that

is willing to step and do the work on the ground

to make this happen. It takes a lot of resources

to make it work and I do believe that that is is

keeping people out of the system and providing

them with a way to recover that is more

appropriate for them than the traditional

incarceration system.

Gentlemen thank you for your time today it's

been informative and your passion and

commitment to this whole project and we will

be back and take a personal look at one of the

success stories of the Summit County program

when we return on the County Seat

Welcome back to The County Seat. We have

been looking at the war on Opioids and more

explicitly the battle for recovery. Putting people

behind bars proves to not be as effective as

putting people into a program, monitored by

the court. While as we have learned it is not

instantly a success and it has not worked for

everyone. When it does work, it is a game

changer and a life saver as we find out this week

"On the Ground"

My Name is Katie, I am a mom of three, Ethan

Abbi and Anni. I was put on pain pills when I

was 12 years old. We found out we had no

cartilage in my knees, I went on to upper

narcotics because I couldn't have surgery until,

when I was 23 My Doctor put me on Oxycodone

30's after that is when I lost control. I started

abusing my pain pills, and then I ended up

selling my pain pills for Heroine because its

cheaper,

When we lived in the little white house we had

a little upstairs and every time we got home I

would come straight there and come straight

upstairs, I would have the girls come up with

me and keep them there and keep them away

from them because they were always in the

bedroom doing stuff

I've always had my brother to be there and

watch me and play with me to keep me

occupied from my mom. I really didn't like it.

I ended up losing the house, the kids,

everything. So my sister set me up she called a

few of the cops that we know in town so they

were sitting around town when I pulled into

town and I went to jail, and it took her almost a

year to tell me it was her that turned me in and

she was afraid that I would be mad at her I told

her I wasn't mad she saved my life.

I was offered a program called drug court and I

wanted to take it I wanted help. At first it was a

really hard process I didn't get to see my kids

much I was always at work or at drug court, but

as it progressed it got easier. Its helped me

learn how to live life in society again, I have

been at my job for almost three years which is

something new for me. I jumped around, we

have been in the same house for two years , we

went house to house we have a very stable

happy life, a lot of it is because of the program I

went through and drug court and learn how to

live life that way and how to stay sober without

using

My mom is there for us twenty-four seven.

Even If she is at work she's still here for us she

helps us with our homework she makes us clean

our bedroom which is awesome because its

clean

Now I can stay caught up on my homework, if I

need help I can just ask her if I need anything

like that she will help me,

I would say For my family because we can only

go up, just moving forward in life in a good

positive way, I am just excited that I am here to

see them grow to watch them succeed help

them succeed and teach them to be the best

that they can be,

My advice for families, as hard as it is to think

that your family member is going to turn on you

the best thing you can do to help your family is

call the cops and turn them in so they can get

the help, because if you don't get the help you

will die.

Katie shared with us that she never wanted to

be a drug user, she was never seeking a thrill,

she is one of the many who just slipped off the

edge of a medical regimen and couldn't get

back on the path. I will be right back with some

closing thoughts.

Welcome back to The County Seat. I think that

Katie's comment about never wanting to be a

drug user or thinking that she had become an

addict until it overtook her life is very telling,

and I am afraid not too uncommon. I have had

lengthy conversations with my sister in law who

lives in rural Illinois and is a pharmacist for a

small rural hospital. She has seen the

devastation caused by this epidemic with a

sharp increase in overdose deaths coming out

of communities with populations as small as

800 people, where everyone knows everyone

and most people, even the kids show up in

church every week. These are the kids who

have been captain of the football team, worked

along side dad on the farm bailing hay or

stacking bags of corn or soybeans. It's the mom

who twisted an ankle going into the root cellar,

or grandpa who pinched a nerve and got

treated for pain. These are all people who get

hurt and get a prescription and can never get

off. In most cases, the signs of addiction are

there. Someone outside the sphere of

addiction almost always knows that they are

hooked, especially when the OxyContin has

turned to heroin and an honest person has to

turn to crime to support the habit. Someone

usually knows it, and as Katie pointed out, in her

case, it was her sister who turned her in to the

police anonymously.

The moral to Katie's story is that she would

probably be dead and her kids would be left

behind if she had not gotten caught. What

seemed to be the act of a traitor, in reality was

the act of a savior. And that is the message to

take away from all of this. You see, from my

perspective, people who are strongly addicted

can only dig themselves in deeper, they can't

dig their way out and they don't want to grab

that hand of help until they are off the drug. So

someone has to force them off the drug. Often

the only thing to do is to make that call to get

them into the system and get them off the

street, and in to treatment. Like Katie, more

often than not, at the sober end of the tunnel,

they are grateful for being turned in.

It hit particularly close to home two years ago

when my nephew, who had battled such an

addiction, found himself stuck in a corn field in

his car, high at the time and in desperation took

his own life. I can't begin to tell you how

devastating that loss has been on a close-knit

rural family. And the hard part is, there was

probably someone who knew.

I hope you will take the time to share this half

hour with a friend, or your family.

We'll see you next week ON the County Seat.

My Name is Katie, I am a mom of three, Ethan

cartilage in my knees, I went on to upper

narcotics because I couldn't have surgery until,

cheaper,

When we lived in the little white house we had

have been in the same house for two years , we

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét