Tuesday, February 8, 2022
Sunday, September 5, 2021
Best Decision Ever: The Sinner's Prayer
Soon we will have to make a decision that affects not only our life on Earth, but our eternal destiny. "Living your best life" -- another often-repeated saying from 2020 --starts with praying the Sinner's Prayer.
Friday, August 13, 2021
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
Sunday, August 8, 2021
Juliette's Dreams: Free E-Book
Available free at my website:
https://juliettefoxcroft.weebly.com
Read the free e-book on my blog.
Acts 2:17
God
communicates in special ways. He may
touch your heart when you listen to a song.
He may send someone to speak an encouraging word or perform an act of
kindness. He may command your guardian
angel to hide your car keys, causing you to leave home five minutes late – and
avoid a fatal collision.
Every night,
when we close our eyes and His angels watch over us, our subconscious minds
sort through the day’s events. Sometimes
the Lord will use that quiet time, when we are free from distractions, to examine
our worries, show us solutions, and even reveal future events.
Usually I
don’t remember my dreams in the morning.
However, in November and December 2020, I received several dreams about
the End Times that were so startling that I immediately wrote them down in a
journal upon awakening.
The first
dream was about transhumanism and a foreign invasion on
I have collected these dreams in a free e-book, Juliette's Dreams: Volume I.
This e-book is available to download on my website, https://juliettefoxcroft.weebly.comMonday, July 26, 2021
In Case of Emergency: Free E-Book
Available as a free PDF download at my website:
https://juliettefoxcroft.weebly.com
or with Google docs.
Civilization is disintegrating. Medical crises, runaway inflation, supply chain disruptions, Internet hacks, power outages, devastating storms, bloody riots, unidentified aerial phenomena, transhumanism, and even creepy robot dogs -- this bizarre new reality imperils everyone on Earth.
When I was a kid, my friends and I joked about the End of the World as if it were a game. If you had to outsmart aliens, androids, or zombies, where would you hide? A cave? A tropical island? How long would you stay there? What survival gear would you bring?
Now we’re facing the sobering truth that this is not a game.
Realizing that life on Earth is fragile, preppers are
rushing to stockpile canned food and pack bug out bags. If electricity and the Internet abruptly
vanish, cell phones and computers will be useless. We will gather around battery-powered radios
and read books by candlelight.
For my Christian readers, I have created a free e-book with essential Bible study resources, including Psalm 91 and God's Positive Answers. While we still have Internet access, you are welcome to download this free handbook, print it out, store it with your Bibles in your emergency supplies, and share it with your family and friends.
Please contact me with your suggestions for future editions of this handbook.
Saturday, January 23, 2021
The Story of the Two Wolves
One evening an old Lakota
told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside people.
He said, "My son, the battle is between two wolves inside us all. One is
evil. It has anger, envy, jealousy, doubt, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance,
self pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and
ego."
He continued, "The other is good. It has joy, peace, serenity, humility,
kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, forgiveness, truth, compassion, and
faith."
The grandson thought about it for a minute, and then asked his grandfather,
“Which wolf wins?"
The old Lakota simply replied, “The one you feed.”
Tuesday, January 5, 2021
Lessons From History
I found this quote from Professor Barker on social media; we need these encouraging words in our troubled times.
History is the story of what men and women have thought and done in the past.
It tells how they have lived and struggled and worked.
It tells how they have suffered from errors, false ideas, and misfortunes.
But it tells also how they have continued for many thousands of years to make the world always a happier and more comfortable place in which to live.
There are sad, discouraging chapters in the book of history, but it tells a cheerful story when we read it as a whole, for the successes of the men and women of the past have been far greater than their failures.
From these peoples of the past, we
have gained a background of strength, of ability, and of courage.
Eugene Campbell Barker (1874 – 1956)
Chair of the History Department
The
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
The Great Reset: College & Careers
Since my last blog post, the construction dust of the Great Reset has started to settle. We did not ask for this Brave New World of lockdowns and social restrictions, but we grown-ups have gamely attempted to adjust to it.
It is not easy to be so greatly jarred out of our comfort zone. Should we expect things to go back to normal soon? In a few years? During our lifetimes?
Over the past few months, I have noticed a bellwether change. Money and status -- elements of modern life that used to be of paramount importance -- have lost their luster. If you are not driving a quarter-million-dollar sports car by the time you turn thirty, maybe it is because that goal has become meaningless.
New priorities are
emerging. People are assessing who they
are, what they have, and where they want to be right now. The five-year
plan, once the hallmark of a business professional, is rarely brought up in an
interview anymore. How could applicants
possibly know what they will be doing, let alone what the world will look like,
a few years from now?
Social
isolation has wreaked havoc with colleges and careers.
Let’s look at the pandemic’s impact on higher education. With many universities closed, classes have moved online. This is not the way that most students envisioned pursuing their academic dreams. When the dorms closed, the social atmosphere evaporated. Where is the sense of camaraderie created by embarking on this big adventure with one’s classmates? How will students build the priceless lifelong friendships that college inspires?
Another joy of higher
education is taking classes taught by that
guy – the professor everyone loves, who cracks jokes while he compacts the rise
and fall of the
Online classes, therefore, demand a higher level of self-motivation. If attending college is far more about earning a piece of paper than enjoying the journey, students will have to decide if that goal is worth both the cost and the effort. Before the pandemic, nearly half of college students dropped out before the end of their freshman year. Will we see that statistic climb in 2020?
Let’s suppose that students – especially those who are close to graduation – chug through their remaining classes and earn their degrees. Now they are applying for jobs…side by side with over thirty million people who lost their steady paychecks during the pandemic.
The competition for good jobs is fiercer now than during the Great Recession.
And that economic downturn was no cakewalk, as anyone who survived it can tell you.
About ten years ago, an interesting phenomenon emerged: after many jobs were eliminated and unemployment benefits ran out, millions of people disappeared. Poof. Gone. No, not raptured to a better place. They were still here in the Earthly realm. But they stepped outside of The System.
During the Great Recession, the government expected laid off workers to either find another job or go back to school and train for a new career. But when millions of former employees fell off the radar, data analysts coined the phrase, “discouraged workers” to explain their absence from labor reports.
Discouraged was an inaccurate label. The truth is that these former employees reinvented themselves. They discovered new ways to earn money. They created small businesses. They raised alpacas and created artisan goods. They built tiny houses from reclaimed materials. They started blogs and vlogs. They sold their furniture, bought sailboats, and traveled the world.
They had adventures.
Some eventually returned to the nine-to-five world, with the confident and fearless expectation of one day again setting out into the unknown.
Bloggers are armchair sociologists; we analyze trends and guestimate what will happen next, tasks infinitely more challenging in 2020 than ever before. Once the economy improves, I predict that we will see a greater variety of jobs return (albeit with online interviewing, social distancing, and other modifications). This will improve the odds for job seekers to find a position related to their education and work experience.
As the lockdowns and social restrictions continue, however, not only is society reinventing itself, but also many employees are examining their job duties, their working conditions, and their career goals. Just as in the Great Recession, it is likely that we will continue to see working-age adults pursue options – temporarily or permanently -- outside of the traditional job market.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Your Job Search During Coronavirus
It’s a mind-boggling statistic: in the past three weeks, the coronavirus has cost 17 million Americans their careers.
Is it possible to find another good job during a pandemic?
Yes, the employment outlook remains hopeful. Even with the challenge of social distancing, many companies are hiring and new jobs are emerging.
What Happened to Us?
When I wrote my January 21st blog post, I did not know that the world was about to fall off its axis.
In the past few months, the Covid-19 pandemic has threatened the survival of the human race, robbed families of loved ones, devastated the global economy, and annihilated millions of careers.
The 21st century lifestyle that we Americans took for granted has slipped away. We have flashbacks about slogging through our old daily routines, a paper cup of coffee in hand. We commuted to our jobs. We had lunch with coworkers. We attended weddings and baby showers. We jetted to
Today, pajamas are haute couture. We brew our coffee at home and search the news for a shred of hope. Things we complained about a few months ago seem trivial in this strange new era of travel bans, social distancing, and self quarantines.
Our careers sit as idle as the cars in our driveways, for the economic impact of the virus has been fierce. When the stock market plummeted into bear territory, employers began cutting staff. Layoffs – something few people have thought about since the Great Recession – have returned like a bad dream.
If you lose your job during the coronavirus outbreak, what should you do?
10 Steps to a New Job
Becoming unemployed during an economic boom is vexing; getting pink-slipped during the double whammy of a global pandemic and a financial downturn is beyond stressful. Are we in a recession? A depression? We do not even know what words accurately describe this disaster.
During unnerving times like this, it is important to plan and proceed with clear-headed action. Think about occasions in the past when you have changed jobs. Maybe you relocated to a
Here are some guidelines for getting back to work:
1. Dust off your resume. Add your latest work experience, including your job title and dates of employment. When you list the duties of your last position, emphasize your responsibilities and achievements. Describe ways that you exceeded your company’s expectations and helped build its success.
2. Line up professional and personal references for prospective employers to contact. Ask your former boss to email you a letter of recommendation.
3. Practice interviewing scenarios with your mom (that’s what moms are for!) or a close friend. Recruiters will question you in detail about your knowledge, skills, and abilities. Showcase the qualities that make you stand out from the competition.
4. Good jobs still exist; your mission is to find them. Make a list of major employers in your area and search their websites for contact information. Read employments ads on Internet job boards. Also, check with your college’s alumni placement department.
5. Employers often fill jobs through word-of-mouth referrals, so network with your family, friends, neighbors, former co-workers, and business colleagues. Reach out to people from your past: even your high school Chemistry teacher may know of a company that’s hiring. Stay alert to opportunities! You could overhear other customers at a supermarket discussing job openings at a local business.
6. Don’t pin all your hopes on an interview at one company; send your resume to multiple hiring managers. Set daily and weekly goals for submitting applications, and set up a spreadsheet to track when and where you sent them.
7. Expand your job search outside of your current field. Does your resume list education, skills, and/or work experience that are transferrable to other positions? Think about your ambitions when you were growing up. Did you land your dream job, or is this the right time to pursue a career change?
8. A recruiter may contact you by text, phone, or social media. When you proceed to an in-person interview, expect to follow social distancing precautions. Handshakes are so 2019. Take cues from the hiring manager about substituting a fist bump, elbow tap, or a friendly wave from six feet away.
9. As an alternative to being a payrolled employee, consider becoming an independent contractor. Companies like Uber and Instacart, for example, recruit self-motivated individuals with customer service skills and safe driving records.
10. Explore other self-employment opportunities. It is possible that building your Amazon shop’s inventory or ghostwriting novels on Fiverr could give you a much-needed financial boost during your job search. With a strong work ethic, you may even turn your side hustle into full-time work.
Who’s Hiring?
The list of the nonessential companies that have temporarily or permanently closed their doors grows every day. The travel and hotel industries have been hard hit. With social distancing restrictions, museums, theaters and sports arenas have gone silent, as well.
We should maintain three positive thoughts during this crisis:
>> When one door closes, another opens. Although the pandemic has eliminated millions of traditional jobs, shelter-in-place directives have created the need for a large variety of other positions.
>> Once the coronavirus subsides and the economy recovers, people will begin to travel and attend social events again. Employers in these industries will resume hiring, which will increase the variety of available positions.
>> At that point, some companies will rehire their former workers. This is a win-win scenario. Not only will these employees once again earn steady paychecks, but also their employers will save the substantial time and money required to train new staff.
In the present time, where are applicants landing interviews and job offers?
The answer is in the news reports we wake up to each morning. Industries have been divided into two categories: essential and non-essential. We’re seeing the greatest gains in job creation in the businesses that remain open during the pandemic, which include:
- Supermarkets
- Restaurants (takeout and delivery services)
- Big Box Retailers (for example, Costco, Wal-Mart, and Target)
- Dollar Stores and Convenience Marts
- Transportation Companies
- Telecommunications
- Healthcare
- Medical Research Firms
If you are looking for something different, be reassured that these are not the only jobs available. Identify essential companies, check their websites for job openings, and keep a flexible attitude.
Employers continue to seek qualified applicants for a myriad of front and back office positions: Management, Sales, IT professionals, Engineers, Safety Consultants, Finance Managers, Human Resources, Customer Service, etc.
Pro job hunter's tip: Even if a company is not advertising a job you are interested in, you can send your resume to the hiring manager with a polite note requesting to be kept on file for consideration for future openings.
Please be aware that some HR departments may be running with a smaller crew and/or working from home. This could cause delays in replying to job applicants. Be sure that your resume includes several ways to contact you (cell, text, email, etc.).
Conclusion
Employment is a two-way transaction. Just as you rely on your paychecks to cover your bills, companies need qualified employees to run their operations. If you’re looking for a job during this challenging time, keep your hopes up and your options open.
Friday, February 28, 2020
Is a Philosophy Degree a Good Idea?
- education
- computer science
- math
- business
- law
- political science
- psychology
- history
- journalism
Friday, January 24, 2020
Should College Be Free?
Why Offer Free College?











