My Papaw Susong

Randle in 1955 parade

Someone in my family ran across this photo of my Papaw Susong recently.  I haven’t seen a ton of pictures of him, and didn’t know him, he died when I a baby.  Not surprisingly, my Dad looks alot like him.  My mom made the comment that this picture, taken in 1955, looks like it was taken in 1855.  I’ve got an entire book on the family history of the Susong’s.  If I ever get enough free time, I’ll have to digitize it for posterity.  I think Parker and Carson would like to know that way back when, their family used to own all of West Bristol.

I get asked alot where the name Susong came from, or they say, “I thought you would asian”. I take great pleasure in telling them, “No, it’s French, and my family used to own Bristol”. It’s silly, but hey, it’s true… Kind of.

Ariel Photos of 2010 Flood

These are the same pictures that folks have been passing around on Facebook.  They were taken by Paula Williams. Amazing shots!

Dunbar Cave At Its Peak, I Hope

We took a walk down to Dunbar Cave since the road is “closed”. Quotes are in order since there are alot of site seers who ignore the signs and drive down there anyway. The boys got to have alittle adventure walking down to the “over-flood” as Parker calls it. I found some great ariels on facebook I’ll post shortly that really show the situation well. In the meantime, here are some from my phone of our walk.

They caught me! The ONE time I speed.

I was caught in Morristown on our way home from East Tennessee.  Actually we were leaving after visiting my parents, but we were, at this moment, heading for the hospital to visit my Dad after he had heart surgery.  He went in with chest pains the day before.  So, I think I had a good reason to be speeding, but hey, why fight it.  $50 and it helps keeps the road paved, or some sheriff make a boat payment… whatever. Enjoy my misfortune. On the bright side… Look at the detail (minus our plate, which I smudged out) in the last picture.  I’m “allegedly” going “60” and you can clearly see our car and Parker’s head…  Crazy.

Update: St. Jude’s Trike-A-Thon

Parker and Carson are both taking part in their preschool’s trike-a-thon for St. Jude.  If you would like to sponsor them just click the links below.  It’s a one time donation, not a per lap deal.  So don’t worry about it being multiplied.  Thanks in advance to all who help out.  St. Jude thanks you!

[The Trike-a-Thon is over, thanks to all who gave]

UPDATE:

Parker and Carson both raised $125.00. That’s each of them, so $250.00 total!!  Not bad!  Thanks to all who gave!

NWS Weather Statement!!

…MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER FOR ALL OF MIDDLE TENNESSEE ON SATURDAY… A STRONG UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM WILL MOVE OUT OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TODAY AND BRING A CHANCE FOR STRONG THUNDERSTORMS TO THE MID STATE AS EARLY AS LATE TONIGHT. BY EARLY SATURDAY…SOME STORMS COULD BECOME SEVERE…AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE…WITH THE THREAT FOR SEVERE WEATHER CONTINUING THROUGHOUT THE DAY SATURDAY…INTO THE EARLY EVENING. A FEW STORMS WILL HAVE THE CAPABILITY TO PRODUCE LARGE HAIL…DAMAGING WINDS AND ISOLATED TORNADOES. THE SEVERE STORMS FORECAST CENTER HAS PUT THE ENTIRE MID STATE IN A MODERATE RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS. THIS IS THE STRONGEST STORM SYSTEM TO AFFECT MIDDLE TENNESSEE SO FAR THIS SPRING…AND THE POTENTIAL FOR SEVERE WEATHER LOOKS TO BE INCREASINGLY LIKELY…INCLUDING TORNADIC SUPERCELLS. A MODERATE RISK MEANS THAT THERE IS A 45 PERCENT CHANCE OF A SEVERE WEATHER EVENT (DAMAGING WINDS…LARGE HAIL OR TORNADOES) OCCURRING WITHIN 25 MILES OF ANY GIVEN LOCATION. NOW IS THE TIME TO THINK ABOUT WHERE YOU AND YOUR FAMILY WILL GO SHOULD SEVERE WEATHER APPROACH YOUR AREA ON SATURDAY. HERE ARE A FEW TORNADO SAFETY RULES. TORNADO SAFETY RULES

1. IN HOMES OR SMALL BUILDINGS, GO TO THE BASEMENT OR TO AN INTERIOR ROOM, SUCH AS A CLOSET OR BATHROOM, ON THE LOWEST LEVEL. GET UNDER SOMETHING STURDY SUCH AS A HEAVY TABLE OR A BED.
2. IN MOBILE HOMES AND VEHICLES, ABANDON THEM AND GO TO A STURDY STRUCTURE. IF THERE IS NO SUCH STRUCTURE NEARBY, LIE FLAT IN A DITCH, RAVINE, GULLY, CULVERT OR LOW SPOT WITH YOUR ARMS AND HANDS SHIELDING YOUR HEAD.
3. IN LARGE BUILDINGS, SUCH AS SCHOOLS, FACTORIES, HOSPITALS, NURSING HOMES AND SHOPPING CENTERS, GO TO THE PREDESIGNATED SHELTER AREA. INTERIOR HALLWAYS ON THE LOWEST FLOOR ARE USUALLY BEST. STAY AWAY FROM ROOMS THAT ARE LARGE IN AREA BECAUSE THEY HAVE WEAKLY SUPPORTED ROOFS.
4. IN HIGH-RISE BUILDINGS, GO TO AN INTERIOR SMALL ROOM OR HALLWAY.
5. STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. DON’T BOTHER OPENING OR CLOSING THEM. IT WON’T MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE TO THE STRUCTURE AND YOU’LL JUST WASTE TIME OR PUT YOURSELF AT RISK SHOULD GLASS BREAK AS YOU ARE NEAR.

Password Tips… Is your’s strong enough?

Just a quick note about passwords. Over the few years I’ve been administering the network here at First Baptist, I’ve come across some really great and really not so great passwords. I thought it was about time I addressed this. There are a few ways to create a really secure password, that is also very memorable, if you are willing to take just a few moments to think about it. Here are a few tips and examples:

1) Passwords shouldn’t be words in the dictionary.
The easiest thing for hackers to do is what’s called a brute force attack, wherein they have software that literally tries every word in the dictionary.

2) You should have different passwords for every application.
Your banking password should be different from your email password, etc… If someone gained access to your personal email and saw you bank at BankX, they now have two very critical pieces of information that could’ve been prevented by having two separate passwords.

3) Don’t use Dates, Names, etc…
At least not on their own. A combination of those can make a good password.

4) Change your passwords periodically.
The longer you use a password the more likely it will be hacked. Change them at least twice a year.

Good Password Examples:
Acronyms make great passwords that are very difficult to break. For example: “I Love To Drink Coffee At The Airport” could be Il2dc@ta. That’s Capital ” I “, lowercase ” L “. That’s an easy to remember sentence and a password that no one will guess. It’s 8 characters, has a capital letter, a special character, and a number; which will satisfy the most demanding password requirements.

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Marc Boroditsky, a computer security expert and chief executive officer of Passlogix, says, an eBay password might be ebnpr2007 — eb for eBay, npr for a familiar acronym and 2007 for the year. “So, ebnpr2007 isn’t a word in the dictionary and isn’t easy to guess if you were attempting to gain access,” he says.

New Pictures… Finally!

It has been awhile since I’ve uploaded pictures.  I’ve been having trouble getting the pictures off of our high capacity (HC) SD card.  None of our card readers will read the HC cards, and I just discovered that our camera has a bad USB port, so I couldn’t get them images off the card until now.  I’m glad it was 4GB card, or we would’ve been in danger of running out of space!  So, I just uploaded 4, count ’em, FOUR, new galleries. Parker’s birthday, snow, Easter, and Parker’s first tee-ball game.  Here’s a slide show of Parker’s Tee-Ball game. Enjoy!

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