The Angels Came to Sing
That’s the name of the song I’m going to be singing in Sacrament meeting, probably on December 13th. It’s by Sally Deford and can be found on http://www.defordmusic.com for anyone who’s interested. I’ll say this – it’s a much easier song than what I usually do, but it worked out well with surgery. Usually we work on a song for about 8 weeks before we’re really running it smoothly all the way through. This one, we ran through smoothly on the first go round. I talked to Brianna tonight about law school and work and stuff. She’s talked about doing a duet together, and I reminded her that I’m desperately hoping to not be in our ward come next September (though if I got into UW, I could extend that some). But NIU, BYU, and Cornell – I won’t be here much longer than the first or second week in August. So there’s a definite time frame there for finding a duet and then working on it and then doing it in Sacrament meeting.
Not really much else to say. I’m getting really tired of getting hung up on at work and people not willing to take responsibility for their situations and do something about them. Okay, so you have problems – you lost your job, you made bad decisions on buying stuff you don’t need, whatever the problem is – it’s your life and seriously – take responsibility for it already. Oh, and even if you try bankruptcy, good luck in getting rid of your student loan debt. I love the one or two people a day that are genuinely glad to hear from us and want to take care of their accounts, but that’s not enough to outweigh the rest of the day. I’m just frustrated with work. It does look like we’re going to get some incoming training on Wednesday of next week though. Should make things a little better, but it’s still not what I want. Mostly I feel like I’m spinning my wheels at work and that’s no good. So for now I keep studying for the LSAT and cross my fingers beyond that.
*Edit* Sorry about that, a friend left me a note saying I’d forgotten the title of the song 😛 All fixed now.
"Life is measured not by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away."