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One of the benefits of having lived so close to the edge for so long is not taking things for granted. I know what it’s like to be facing losing (and then actually losing) my home. I know what it’s like to lose a loved one to addiction, to parent alone, to be afraid, to be facing homelessness, to be dependent on the charity of others. I know the sting and humiliation of throwing my lot at the mercy of an overworked DSHS caseworker in hopes of receiving aid. I know what it feels like to have our names on paper ornaments on the Giving Christmas Tree, where a “Boy, Age 8″ would like some Legos and a coat. I know well the spaces inhabiting our periphery, the margins of our lives, where we all hope to never go, and where hope is all you’ve got if you get there.
Fun
We're coming up on a new year, and with that comes new resolutions and new challenges. Among one of the most common of those resolutions among Americans is the goal to drop a few pounds. And, if you're among them, then you should realize you're not alone.
The first general conferences were more like sacrament meetings. Over time this changed, but an exception was made in October 1942.
Claire Ryann might only be 3 years old, but she already has 15,000 subscribers on YouTube and has landed her first Hollywood film. That's because this vivacious Latter-day Saint toddler loves to sing and knows Disney songs by heart.
Thanks to the Deseret News for making us aware of this story.
We are so grateful for heroes like Capt. Mervyn Sharp Bennion who have served our country selflessly.
Tamra Hyde, a woman who has been living a minimalist, nomadic life for the past year and a half and has participated in two survival-premised reality TV shows, is not your typical Mormon woman. But is there a typical Mormon woman? There are ideal Christlike attributes we all should strive for, but every woman is different and has a strong personal identity—something Hyde is trying to show by the way she lives her life.
The Church issued the following statement today in response to news media requests: The positions attributed to BYU professor Randy Bott in a recent Washington Post article absolutely do not represent the teachings and doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. BYU faculty members do not speak for the Church. It is unfortunate that the Church was not given a chance to respond to what others said. ...