Well my Wednesday wedding will wait for yet another week to go by — I’ll take a Thursday wedding, Friday wedding anyone, Saturday, do I hear Sunday wedding bells, ok then make it a Monday wedding, is anyone standing up for a Tuesday wedding, ok then I will settle for the Wednesday wedding and be thankful :yes: :prayer-hands: :flyup: :mdrmdr: My vote is we might have to wait for Feast of Trumpets to keep in line with the Shemetah alignment to ring in the new year. Hopefully the Lord is using the same calendar that we are … of either Monday Sept. 6th at sundown (Labor Day) or will it be Tuesday Sept. 7th or at closing … Wednesday Sept. 8th at sundown? :popcorn Starts @ 6:01 - Fair Use - Can I just say, Lisa is funny to watch in her emphasis of items …. Her head tilts down and looking to the left is funny to me. I do zoom calls a lot, both for work and for my students, and looking at the camera is not that hard, sorry this one just hit my funny bone ….. :mdrmdr: :mdrmdr: She always presents interesting material. I would love to see the Aurora dip down here in the south but getting the left over outer bands of Ida leads me to don’t I will see any of that. Bwahahaha yeah she will never look straight directly at the camera … its always to the left. What I thought was cool this time is … she is literally giving a rapture time frame with dates! :yahoo: She has never done that before, that I know of. Last night the sky was awesome here … the weird thing was I didn’t see any moonlight at all but yet the sky was free of clouds and the stars were soooooo bright. You didn’t need a telescope to see the Little Dipper, etc. One star was the brightest of the whole bunch … not sure what that one is called … I have heard that when folks are trying to remember something, most people tend to look up and to the left. I know I do. And if you're imagining the future, you look to the right. This may, I theorize, have something to do with the way we write--left to right? Or maybe memories are stored in the left side of our brains? I always like Lisa's videos too. Polaris, the North Star. The Little Dipper is important in navigation as its brightest star, Polaris, also known as the North Star, reveals the location of the North Celestial Pole. Polaris is the nearest bright star to the pole. The star’s angle above the horizon can also be used to find your latitude on Earth, which used to make the North Star exceptionally useful to sailors. For observers near the equator, Polaris appears near the horizon. Starts @ 1:20 - Fair Use - I wonder what these guys will be doing during the ten days of darkness.
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