Blooming once again

A few weeks back, I bought a hanging plant that I found on sale while shopping with my parents. I was convinced that I could keep it alive — it only lasted a week before it began wilting from neglect and overwhelming heat.

I’ve tried to do better since and, finally, the work is paying off. The first flower since the plant’s near death experience has bloomed.

Kittens galore

It’s been a great week for photo opportunities. While at my interview on cat neglect, I got to meet about 10 kittens who were full of energy and cute as a button. Today, I passed a field of sunflowers on my way to and from quorum court in Dewitt. It doesn’t get any better than that. 😀

Flowers galore

I’m obsessed with flowers this year. I can’t get enough of the blooms and taking pictures of the ones I find as well — and there are plenty to take pictures of. This week, I found these flowers while heading for an interview in Keo, a nearby town.

Another subject that I love to shoot this year is wildlife. I found this small beauty while heading back from the White River National Wildlife Refuge.

Like this:

Hear me roar!

I officially became a new member of the Stuttgart Lions Club on May 11 with Dave Straus as my sponsor. It was pretty exciting and I have enjoyed my month in it so far. I’m looking forward to participating with the club.

Like this:

Home Sweet Home

I am finally back home in Wynne, Ark., after four months in DC completing an internship. I checked out of my Rockville, MD, apartment at 9:30 a.m. yesterday, and had just enough time yesterday to buy a pink ‘Washington, DC’ hoodie at Union Station as we passed through DC to get to BWI Airport.

Out of five suitcases, four suitcases were mine and they were heavy and a pain to get to the airport. Luckily, none of the suitcases were overweight. Well-one weighed in at 56 pounds, so the check-in attendant asked me if I wanted to just take out 5 pounds in items so I could avoid the $90 overweight fee. I took out both a blanket and my winter coat and still weighed in at 51 pounds. The attendant kindly said she would overlook the extra pound and let me go on without paying the extra fee. Thank goodness!

Security was another issue for mom and I. Mom’s carry-on was searched because she had an item that looked like a “fishbowl.” Turns out, it was a plastic green flower that was in a little bowl of fake water that mom gave me during her last visit.

I stupidly said as she pulled it out, “oh, it’s fake!” The security guard was sarcastic answering me, however, she still had to call her superviser over to check that it was okay to allow to pass. It was fake water for crying out loud! The superviser gave her approval so we were soon back on our way!

Cindy was on a separate flight than mom, Elizabeth and I so she made it to Little Rock 30 minutes after the rest of us landed. It was fine with me, however, since it gave us enough time to put our luggage in the car and talk to my dad-who met us at the airport.

Dad and I watched Cindy’s plane land on the real time flight tracker and it was pretty cool to track Cindy’s progress on the digital map and guess which plane-hers or a Houston plane-was landing first based on their altitude. While standing there, man waiting for the Houston plane said the plane, scheduled to land at 5 p.m. that day, had been delayed due to a malfunction in the landing gear-it would not go up once they started to leave the runway! The plane had to turn around and passengers had to board another plane. However, to further complicate the flight-they had to wait for weather to clear. I’m glad I was not on that flight!

Once Cindy’s plane landed, we were quickly on our way and only stopped once to grab some food. We arrived home around 11:30 p.m. and I had a pleasant surprise once there!

I am the new and proud owner of a Toyota Corolla S car!!! I am so excited. I was too out of it to do more than look at the car and accuse everyone of lying to me (jokingly of course).

This morning, however, was a different story! I drove it to church and everywhere. I love it!

I have a job!

Once I get back May 16, I will be starting my new job two days later on Monday, May 18, at the Wynne Progress. Yes, I’m moving home.

I am actually excited about the prospect of moving home since I will get to be closer to my family for at least  a year before I move on. Elizabeth is wanting me home for her 21st birthday on Nov. 2, and I as well. I have also already told grandma and mom that I expect some home-cooked meals from time to time!

22 Days

I have 22 days left before I leave Washington, DC, for Arkansas. Wow. It does not seem right, especially since I am still searching for a job! It is actually scary! I graduate May 9 and I still have no job! 😦

On a positive note-I have my room to myself for the weekend. Ever is attending her sister’s Quinceañera, or birthday celebration. She has been dieting for this event the whole semester and already has a list of food she wants to eat once she is back.

Home Sweet Home

The ACM Awards are playing, my dog Izzie is chewing on her duck at my feet, and my mom is cooking me chicken and rice while I read on the couch- I am loving my weekend at home.

I am spending the weekend-Thursday through tomorrow-in Arkansas to see family and attend the Arkansas Pro Chapter of Society of Professional Journalists’ annual conference. I have to admit it was a great conference, but more on that tomorrow. 🙂

I am off to read some more!

Class Debate

I just submitted for my first debate for my online course, Principles of Persuasion. I was selected to give the negative argument on the topic “America should abandon the war on drugs.” Here it is:

Sunny Curtis of Paragould was in nursing school when she was first given illegal drugs to stay awake. It was the beginning of a battle that would see her losing custody of her four children and contracting Hepatitis C, commonly transferred through contaminated needles.

Curtis is not alone is this battle. In 1999, Americans spent $63.2 billion on illegal drugs, $37.1 billion of which was spent on cocaine. Cocaine, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, is “a powerfully addictive drug” that can cause violent behavior, heart attacks, respiratory failure, strokes and seizure. It can also make people feel euphoric and energetic.

There were also 15,973 drug-induced deaths in America in 1997, the latest year that death certificate data was published, and the deaths were a direct result from drug consumption-mostly overdoses. If those deaths are not enough, there were 9.9 million people that reported driving under the influence of illicit drugs in 2007 who could have killed themselves or others. These statistics show that drugs are not safe and dangerous as well.

Even if legalized, the argument that these illegal drugs could stabilize and regulate the American economy is far from being able to test positive. The American economy might be a work in progress for years to come, but it will take longer for Americans to have illegal drugs legalized, and to figure out how to tax and sale those same drugs. This is also not even considering the other “war on drugs” currently being fought in Mexico.

More than six thousand people died last year in drug violence and more than one thousand people died in the first eight weeks of 2009 alone, according to a March 8 Associated Press article. The 2009 figure is already increasing as the Mexican drug and smuggling cartels continue their violent competition. How will this deadly competition work out if their main business is legalized in the United States, especially if their violence is already appearing in U.S. states bordering Mexico such as Arizona?

If these illegal drugs, such as cocaine, were legalized, would they really lessen the use and dependence on drugs currently seen? I do not see any evidence that would suggest positive, but the opposite. People would still use drugs, like they still drink alcohol, and the only difference would be on which side of the law those people would be using those drugs. Alcohol, which used to be prohibited, was the cause of 21,634 deaths in 2005, excluding accidents and homicides, and there were 12,928 deaths in 2005 linked to alcoholic liver disease.

At Arkansas State University, six underage male students were charged with possession of alcohol and received referrals to student affairs for further university investigation within the first two weeks of school in the fall 2008 semester. In that same two-week period, an 18-year-old female student was sent to St. Bernards Medical Center for alcohol poisoning, three 21-year-old male students were charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor and one male student was arrested off-campus by Jonesboro Police for driving while intoxicated.

In today’s society, saying people are ill-informed of the consequences of alcohol and other drugs should not be considered an excuse. There are multiple TV shows and ads broadcasting the facts and results of using alcohol or illegal drugs, and pamphlets and lessons handed out and taught about alcohol and illegal drugs at schools and universities, health clinics and afterschool programs. I personally know articles have been written on both subjects since I have written about the results of both, such as my Sept. 4, 2008, article detailing the consequences of drinking on campus. People are educated on the topic, so it is just not stopping their use of illegal drugs or even alcohol, a legal drug.

It was only through our war on drugs that Curtis said her life was saved. She was in the Craighead County Detention Center when she received a Bible, which she said she read only because that was all to read. It changed her life. “God was trying to pull me away from the drugs and I was fighting. Eventually he won,” Curtis said. She is now working on her relationship with her children and grandchildren.

The war on drugs will never end. It is a never ending battle, no matter how many alterations to it is made. I do not see how the legalization of illegal drugs will help. If people need the drugs for medical reasons-they are not being stopped. In fact, The Food and Drug Administration approved THC, a pill that is derived from cannabis, for treatment alongside cancer treatments and for AIDS patients as well to maintain their weight. More research is also being done on cannabis as a medical treatment. So if people’s medical needs are being met, is the legalization of these illegal drugs necessary?

In all, I do not consider the argument of abandoning the war on drugs a valid discussion. It is a war that is necessary to save the lives of people that choose to do drugs and anyone else affected by their decision. It is also a war that will likely never end.

http://www.jonesborosun.com, “Agape House.” Part 2. July 21, 2008 http://www.washingtonpost.com, “Source: Mullen offers Mexico update to Obama.” (AP) March 8, 2009 http://www.ncjrs.gov Office of National Drug Control Policy http://oas.samhas.gov Results from the 2007 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: National Findings http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/concern/concern.htm U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration http://www.cdc.gov http://www.alcoholism.about.com/cs/pot/f/mjp_faq23.htm http://www.asuherald.com, “Alcohol: already a problem on campus this semester.” September 4, 2008