Posts

Showing posts from May, 2021

COVID, Personal Care Residents, And The End of Isolation

  American personal care facilities have started to allow guests again following a time of agonizing and isolating lockdowns. The Biden administration recently released instructions permitting regular indoor visits. This is a significant change that comes as almost a hundred million Americans have been immunized, with a significant portion of those individuals residing in personal care facilities. Indeed, even as the top of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautioned for the current seven-day stretch of a potential fourth COVID flood, personal care facilities are so far holding constant, announcing significantly fewer cases since the beginning of inoculations. Reunions inside personal care facilities offered an early gander at what numerous individuals may look like in attempting to return to typical life following a time of isolation. Yet the swinging open of the entryways have additionally uncovered new results of a pandemic that has killed in excess of 179,000 inhabitan

The Lord Wants Us To be Prosperous

  The Lord wants us to be prosperous. As it says in the Bible,  John 10:10  —  “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” Philippians 4:19:   “My God shall supply all your needs according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.”    Monetary gifts and actual prosperity are consistently the will of God. The Bible is a covenant between God and his people: if people have belief in God, he will convey security and prosperity. It is God’s will for his kin to be honored. The covenant (compromise with God) incorporates the lightening of affliction and destitution, which are condemnations to be broken by faith.  These Bible verses assert that God gives rewards, including individual satisfaction, monetary riches, and actual wellbeing for Christians who have adequate belief. God provides rewards, including personal happiness, financial wealth, and physical health, for believers who have sufficient faith. At Chitwood and Chit

Eight Steps to take when Taking on a Business Partner

  The shocking tales of business partnerships turning out badly are of no shortage in the business world.  A large portion of these cautionary tales serves as wake-up calls in regard to why starting a partnership should be researched and all options weighed heavily. It is feasible to begin and grow a business without a partner or partners, but partnering with a reputable person or organization could be extremely beneficial. Choosing to take on a business partner can be lucrative if a good match, so how can it be done in an effective and forthright manner?  Change One’s Vocabulary and Mindset About the Business  At the point when one takes on another colleague, it is important to change the perspective on business proprietorship.  Notice I said “THE” business. On the off chance that one takes on a partner and keeps on alluding to it as “their” business, they are then inherently setting up for disappointment. At the point when one takes on a partner, the organization is not, at this poin

Portofino’s Artwork

Image
  On the far back wall of Portofino’s Greek and Italian Restaurant in East Ridge, TN is a mural displaying the seven great heroes of the Greek epics known as the Iliad and the Odyssey. The Iliad is an ancient Greek epic sonnet in dactylic hexameter, generally ascribed to Homer. Typically considered to have been recorded around the eighth century BC, the Iliad is among the most established surviving works of Western writing, alongside the Odyssey, another epic sonnet ascribed to Homer which recounts Odysseus’ encounters after the occasions of the Iliad. In the cutting edge vulgate (the standard acknowledged rendition), the Iliad contains 15,693 lines, partitioned into 24 books; it is written in Homeric Greek, an artistic blend of Ionic Greek and different lingos. It is typically gathered in the Epic Cycle. Set during the Trojan War, during the ten-year attack of the city of Troy (Ilium) by an alliance of Mycenaean Greek states (Achaeans), it recounts the fights and altercations during t