An advocate for strong Christian marriages and timeless family values. Believing divorce fuels many societal challenges, I’m here to inspire a reformation.
Theo Von gets personal on his podcast and reveals he wishes he had a wife and kids to come home to.
He says he’s losing “motivation” and that there is “not a ton to do” to keep him engaged.
“I think I kind of wish that there was like a family aspect in my life right now, like a wife and children. But that’s not there.”
After 20 years of stand-up and reaching Joe Rogan-level success in podcasting, what Theo wants most now isn’t more money or fame. It’s a family.
At the pinnacle of support for gay marriage among conservatives, Bethany Christian started placing kids with LGBT couples.
They just reversed that decision. They will only hire Christians and they will only serve mother/father adoptive homes.
Vibe shift is having measurable impact.
https://t.co/j7C3h9foRZ
If you paint a swastika on a school, it’s a crime. You will be investigated, arrested, sentenced and fined.
If you put something similar on your chest, you can become a Democrat Senator and the D party will give you millions of dollars.
The modern-day D party is a disaster.
@LarryTaunton Yay! It’s John Lennox week. Just listened to him on the DOAC podcast. As usual, he was Brilliant and so kind. Can’t wait to hear him again with you.
@Katy_Faust That’s the way to change the world! I tell every mother or father I see with small children that my biggest regret is not having more kids, that I wished I’d had 6.
As America approaches its 250th birthday 55% of Democrats would rather live in another country.
As an American, I take no pleasure in posting this. This is nuts.
🚨 WOW! JD Vance reveals after Charlie Kirk's death, his wife Usha moved from being done with having children to wanting more ❤️🙏🏻
"As my wife held Charlie Kirk's widow on the first day of her terrible sorrow, Erika told Usha between sobs that she regretted having only two kids with Charlie."
"For years, I'd asked Usha to have another baby, and for years, she told me she was done, especially now that public service had elevated us into the national spotlight."
"But something changed for Usha, and not long after we buried my friend, she became pregnant with our fourth child, a boy."
"I don't know why God does things like this, but I am grateful to him that there will soon be another source of joy in our lives, another beautiful soul to wonder at and fall in love with, God's beautiful creation."
My birthmom was raped. That is how I was conceived. She was young, not quite 16. Family demanded she abort me, and offered to pay. She said no.
During an ultrasound, doctors saw I would be special needs. I was diagnosed with hydrocephalus. The only thing that changed was she sought out a family who would want a special needs baby.
My parents were qualified and willing to raise a child with special needs.
Of course, when I was born there was no sign of hydrocephalus, but that's a story for another time.
Special needs babies deserve life. They deserve love, care, and life.
Steven Bartlett, host of the podcast, The Diary of a CEO, released an interview with Christian apologist, John Lennox, this week, and his closing comments to him were fascinating:
"One of the most compelling arguments for God that you've presented (and your way of seeing the world and being) is not actually necessarily anything you've written in your books or not not necessarily anything you've said. It is actually you.
You have a certain peace and contentment that I rarely see in people that I interview, but I often see, and I've almost always seen, in the Christians that I've interviewed, and this is a interesting phenomenon for me...it seems to be a trend that a lot of the Christian apologists that I've interviewed have that anchoring that so many of us are looking for."
What a great witness.
Link to interview below
GOD BLESS YOU SIR 🫵🏻🫡
My respect 96 years .
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
AMERICAN MADE .
The GOAT !!
Clint Eastwood Said Something About Getting Old That Stopped Me Cold.
Aging is not gentle.
You are still here. Still present. Still watching the world move. But the body that carried you through everything - the wars, the work, the wildness of youth - begins to ask for more than you can give it. Joints that never complained now speak up in the morning. Eyes that once took in everything now flinch at the light. Breathing, which never required a single thought, starts needing little pauses.
But none of that is the hardest part.
The hardest part is the quiet.
At a certain age, you reach for the phone and remember there is no one left to call.
The people who knew you when you were young - who remembered the same summers, the same streets, the same faces
- are gone. One by one, then all at once, until the memories you carry have no one left to share them with.
So you tell the stories anyway.
To whoever will listen. With a little more color than perhaps the truth deserves. With a touch of pride you've earned and a grief you don't always name. You know the person across from you wasn't there. You know they can't quite feel it the way you do.
But you tell them. Because the telling is the holding on.
Those stories are not just memories. They are the proof that a life was lived. That people were loved. That things mattered.
And if no one asks for them - you offer them anyway, quietly, like setting something down on a table and hoping someone picks it up.
Old age is not simply what happens to a face or a body.
It is memory looking for a place to rest.
And what an older person needs - more than advice, more than solutions, more than someone telling them how to feel - is simply someone willing to sit down, be still, and listen.
Not to fix anything.
Just to be there.
That is the whole gift. And it costs nothing.
~Wild Whispers .
My inbox has been flooded with messages from parents who say their doctors told them their baby would have a disability and recommended abortion.
They refused and delivered baby.
Baby was born with no disability.
Of course not every case, but thousands and thousands.