James Woosley’s Blog

I’m Back….Kinda

March 20th, 2007

Okay, so it’s been two months since I last posted. Life is busy and such. So here’s a speed-round to catch up:

  • Jack (the new dog) is now Lily Jack. Turns out he is a she.
  • Back pain, flu and sinus infection. Physical therapy, medication and antibiotics.
  • Read several books I need to review here, including QBQ, The Screwtape Letters, The Great Divorce and The Fair Tax Book.
  • Started Winning the Future, Good to Great and The Search for Significance…need to finish and review here.
  • Volunteered for a Newt Gingrich dinner sponsored by the Alabama Policy Institute…got my picture taken with the Speaker and his autograph, plus a very special souvenir…a future post of its own.
  • Still adjusting to being on a local consulting job and sleeping in my own bed every night. Isn’t it strange that that’s strange?
  • Dealing with hundreds of instances of blog comment spam. I guess it means my blog is getting noticed by someone?
  • Started my sixth Financial Peace University Class (visit GazelleIntensity.com)
  • Finished my taxes in February…the earliest I’ve ever done it! Something about getting a huge refund (Adoption Tax Credit) can squash the urge to procrastinate.

And today is the two year anniversary of my departure to Taiwan to pick up Ian. What a trip and what an amazing two years!

More posts and more detail to come shortly I hope…as well as a software upgrade that can hopefully deal with the comment spam better. I hate that stuff (but I filter it so you don’t have to wade through it).

Playing Secret Santa

December 22nd, 2006

A few weeks ago Dave Ramsey had Larry Stewart (aka Secret Santa) on his show. It was a really neat interview with a man who secretly gave more than $1 million away a little bit at a time.

Larry now has a website where you can sign up to be a Secret Santa. You don’t have to give away money, just promise to commit a random act of kindness during the holidays. I signed up last week and today was my turn.

I’ve been in a bad mood for the last few days. Maybe it’s the holidays (I’ve always found them hard to enjoy…maybe because it throws off the rhythm of the rest of the year). Anyway, today I had to go out and finish my Christmas shopping. Heather’s done most of it this year, but I had to get something for her and for my secret gag gift person (we have a wicked cruel time in my family!).

I ventured to the store (can’t say where, they might be reading!). People were driving their cars like idiots, driving their carts like idiots, and whether cars or carts, the cell phone to their ear made it even worse.

After that trip, I headed to Walmart to get the van’s oil changed ahead of the trip to Missouri. The young lady who took the key had a red nose and looked absolutely beat. I assumed she had a cold. But when I came back to pay for my stuff and the oil service, she mentioned that she had a fight with a guy (husband? boyfriend?) and that the bills were stressing her out. Probably not a cold, but some serious crying.

I tried to lighten her mood with some cliches, told her I’d pray for her and wished her a Merry Christmas before heading to the parking lot. But when I got there, I just couldn’t drive off. I stashed my stuff and went back into the throngs of people (throngs, not thongs!).

You see, in addition to my shopping, I was looking for someone to help. God was telling me that she was the one to help. So I found a simple Christmas card, wrote a simple note and stuffed it with some cash. I walked back to the service entrance, saw her there and gave her the card. It’s funny, but she instantly had a wonderful smile. I told her Merry Christmas again and said that I was her Secret Santa. Then I walked out the door, jumped in the van and sped away. I felt like I needed to get out of there before she could open the envelope.

What a cool rush that was!

I just hope she doesn’t feel the need to look me up in the computer and send it back. I have to believe that maybe that small amount of cash will help her buy food or a toy for a child. I have to leave that to God. At the least I can believe that for a moment she felt some holiday spirit, and maybe that will carry her through whatever pain she’s going through this holiday season.

Your turn! What can you do for someone else? The challenge is on!

–13 of 40–

TOPS

December 17th, 2006

Last Monday night I had the honor of being the guest auctioneer at a meeting for Heather’s weight-loss group. She’s the president this year, so who could turn her down?

It was a lot of fun. I didn’t do the whole bada-bada-bada auctioneer thing, but kept it lively and everyone seemed to enjoy it.

Though it would have been quite different had there been real money on the line! Everyone had earned Monopoly money all year for losing weight and other good deeds.

But just because the money was fake doesn’t mean they didn’t duke it out over a few items! Some were upping the bids on purpose, just to spend the other’s money.

Sadly, there will soon come a day when silly auctions with Monopoly money will be as foreign as 8-tracks and LPs. Seems Parker Brothers signed a deal with Visa, and the game will no longer have cash but debit cards and card reader. Nothing wrong with debit cards (unlike the evils of credit cards). But with Visa branding, kids playing Monopoly will grow up thinking “Live Can’t Exist Without Visa”.

I often played the banker and it was a great exercise in basic math. Think of all the teenagers working fast food in the next ten years who won’t be able to make change? Er, never mind…it’s already like that.

Then there’s the fun alternative games you can play with the cash. Anyone pay fees and fines into the middle of the board and use the Free Parking space as the lottery? That’s one of my favorite parts of the game, and soon it’ll be history.

I guess I’m getting to be a bit of a curmudgeon (even at 32).

– 12 of 40 –

FPU@FBNM 2006

December 15th, 2006

Last Sunday night, I had the honor and privilege of speaking to our church about Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace University. Our pastor, Dr. Ed Litton, asked me to join him for a discussion on giving, and it was a great opportunity to discuss the impact FPU has had on our church this year.

We started classes in January of 2006, and next weekend, we’ll complete our third class. The numbers thus far are impressive:

  • 63 FPU Graduates (118 Attendees)
  • $162,732.71 in Debt Paid
  • $75,654.08 in Savings Created
  • >$18M in Debt Offers Collected
  • 98 Credit Cards Destroyed!!!

Those numbers are even more impressive because not everyone who participated in the course submitted their debt and savings data.

I’ve also been able to lead two classes at my workplace.

The discussion was well received, and several people asked for more information afterwards. In fact, we may do a similar discussion for our Sunday morning services prior to our next classes starting in February. I had a great time and really enjoyed sharing this life-changing information with such a large group (200+).

Our next class starts February 18th. If you’re in the Mobile, AL area, please consider joining us. If you’re not, find another class at DaveRamsey.com/fpu. There are thousands of classes each year, and people really are getting out of debt and building wealth. You can too!

For more information about FPU and the class schedule for FBNM, visit GazelleIntensity.com.

– 10 of 40 –

The Ten Pillars of Economic Wisdom

December 3rd, 2006

I used to spend a few weeks every summer when I was a teenager with my grandparents in Missouri. My grandmother and I were always close, and though she graduated high school the same year as my mother (she dropped out the first time around), she and I shared a love for books and learning.

We often listened to Rush Limbaugh and discussed politics, economics and other topics that most find boring. One year she found a photocopy of a small pamphlet she’d gotten from a credit union decades before. It took years for me to discover its origins (thanks Google!), but now I know and I’m sharing it with you.

Read it. Chew on it. Digest it. It may just change the way you see your job, your money, your work, your Social Security payments…

THE TEN PILLARS OF ECONOMIC WISDOM
from The American Economic Foundation,
as displayed during the 1964 World’s Fair in New York City

1) Nothing in our material world can come from nowhere or go nowhere, nor can it be free; everything in our economic life has a source, a destination and a cost that must be paid.

2) Government is never a source of goods. Everything produced is produced by the people, and everything that government gives to the people, it must first take from the people.

3) The only valuable money that government has to spend is the money taxed or borrowed out of the people’s earnings. When government decides to spend more than it has thus received, that extra unearned money is created out of thin air, through the banks, and, when spent, takes on value only by reducing the value of all money, savings and insurance.

4) In our modern exchange economy, all payroll and employment come from customers, and the only worth-while job security is customer security; if there are no customers, there can be no payroll and no jobs.

5) Customer security can be achieved by the worker only when he cooperates with management in doing the things that win and hold customers. Job security, therefore, is a partnership problem that can be solved only in a spirit of understanding and cooperation.

6) Because wages are the principal cost of everything, widespread wage increases, without corresponding increases in production, simply increase the cost of every-body’s living.

7) The greatest good for the greatest number means, in its material sense, the greatest goods for the greatest number which, in turn, means the greatest productivity per worker.

8) All productivity is based on three factors: 1) natural resources, whose form, place and condition are changed by the expenditure of 2) human energy (both muscular and mental), with the aid of 3) tools.

9) Tools are the only one of these three factors that man can increase without limit, and tools come into being in a free society only when there is a reward for the temporary self-denial that people must practice in order to channel part of their earnings away from purchases that produce immediate comfort and pleasure, and into new tools of production. Proper payment for the use of tools is essential to their creation.

10) The productivity of the tools–that is, the efficiency of the human energy applied in connection with their use–has always been highest in a competitive society in which the economic decisions are made by millions of progress-seeking individuals, rather than a state-planned society in which those decisions are made by a handful of all-powerful people, regardless of how well-meaning, unselfish, sincere and intelligent those people may be.

Note: Click here for a related ad placed in MIT’s newspaper, The Tech in 1970.

I also passed a copy of it to Dave Ramsey when I first met him at a live event in Atlanta in Nov 2005, but if he read it and had an opinion on it, I’ll never know. (He didn’t mention it on the air.)

– 8 of 40 –

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